slovodefinícia
object-oriented
(gcide)
object-oriented \ob"ject-or"i*ent*ed\, a. (Computers)
Using data structures called objects, which encapsulate data
and typically are accessed by passing messages, which in turn
may trigger internal procedures within the object which are
invisible outside the object.
[PJC]
object-oriented
(foldoc)
object-oriented
object-orientation
OO

1. (OO) Based on objects, classes and methods,
as in object-oriented programming or object-oriented design.
An object-oriented database applies the same concepts to the
storage of objects.

2. vector graphics.

(2014-01-06)
podobné slovodefinícia
object-oriented database
(encz)
object-oriented database,objektově orientovaná databáze n: [it.] Václav
Dvořák
object-oriented database management system
(encz)
object-oriented database management system,řídící systém objektově
orientované databáze n: [it.] Petr Menšík
object-oriented programming language
(encz)
object-oriented programming language,objektově orientovaný programovací
jazyk n: [it.] Václav Dvořák
object-oriented
(gcide)
object-oriented \ob"ject-or"i*ent*ed\, a. (Computers)
Using data structures called objects, which encapsulate data
and typically are accessed by passing messages, which in turn
may trigger internal procedures within the object which are
invisible outside the object.
[PJC]
object-oriented database
(wn)
object-oriented database
n 1: a database in which the operations carried out on
information items (data objects) are considered part of
their definition
object-oriented database management system
(wn)
object-oriented database management system
n 1: a database management system designed to manage an object-
oriented database
object-oriented programing
(wn)
object-oriented programing
n 1: creating a program that can use and support objects [syn:
object-oriented programming, {object-oriented
programing}]
object-oriented programing language
(wn)
object-oriented programing language
n 1: (computer science) a programming language that enables the
programmer to associate a set of procedures with each type
of data structure; "C++ is an object-oriented programming
language that is an extension of C" [syn: {object-oriented
programming language}, {object-oriented programing
language}]
object-oriented programming
(wn)
object-oriented programming
n 1: creating a program that can use and support objects [syn:
object-oriented programming, {object-oriented
programing}]
object-oriented programming language
(wn)
object-oriented programming language
n 1: (computer science) a programming language that enables the
programmer to associate a set of procedures with each type
of data structure; "C++ is an object-oriented programming
language that is an extension of C" [syn: {object-oriented
programming language}, {object-oriented programing
language}]
combined object-oriented language
(foldoc)
Combined object-oriented Language
CooL

(CooL) An object-oriented language from the ITHACA
Esprit
project that combines C-based languages with database technology.

(1995-03-15)
concurrent object-oriented c
(foldoc)
Concurrent Object-Oriented C

(cooC) A language with concurrent object execution
from Toshiba. It has synchronous and asynchronous {message
passing}. It has been implemented for SunOS.


(ftp://tsbgw.isl.rdc.toshiba.co.jp/pub/toshiba/cooc-beta.1.1.tar.Z).

[SIGPLAN Notices 28(2)].

(2000-08-13)
concurrent object-oriented language
(foldoc)
Concurrent Object-Oriented Language

(COOL) An extension of C++ with {task-level
parallelism} for shared-memory multi-processors.

["COOL: A Language for Parallel Programming", R. Chandra
et al in Languages and Compilers
for Parallel Computing, D. Gelernter et al eds, MIT Press
1990, pp. 126-148].

E-mail: Rohit Chandra .

(1994-11-30)
dynamic object-oriented requirements system
(foldoc)
Dynamic Object-Oriented Requirements System

(DOORS) A tool from {Quality
Systems & Software Ltd.} for handling all kinds of
requirements (in fact, any information at all) as modules
containing trees of text objects, qualified by an arbitrary
number of user-defined attributes, and cross-linked by
directional links.
lisp object-oriented programming system
(foldoc)
Lisp Object-Oriented Programming System

(LOOPS) An object-oriented extension of Lisp from the
Intelligent Systems Laboratory at Xerox {Palo Alto
Research Center}. It is used in the development of
knowledge-based systems.

See also CommonLoops.

["The LOOPS Manual", D.G. Bobrow & M. Stefik, Xerox Corp
1983].
object-oriented
(foldoc)
object-oriented
object-orientation
OO

1. (OO) Based on objects, classes and methods,
as in object-oriented programming or object-oriented design.
An object-oriented database applies the same concepts to the
storage of objects.

2. vector graphics.

(2014-01-06)
object-oriented analysis
(foldoc)
object-oriented analysis
OOA

(OOA) The first phase of object-oriented design.

(2014-01-06)
object-oriented database
(foldoc)
object-oriented database
OODB

(OODB) A system offering DBMS facilities in an
object-oriented programming environment. Data is stored as
objects and can be interpreted only using the methods
specified by its class. The relationship between similar
objects is preserved (inheritance) as are references between
objects. Queries can be faster because joins are often not
needed (as in a relational database). This is because an
object can be retrieved directly without a search, by
following its object id.

The same programming language can be used for both data
definition and data manipulation. The full power of the
database programming language's type system can be used to
model data structures and the relationship between the
different data items.

Multimedia applications are facilitated because the
class methods associated with the data are responsible for
its correct interpretation.

OODBs typically provide better support for versioning. An
object can be viewed as the set of all its versions. Also,
object versions can be treated as full fledged objects. OODBs
also provide systematic support for triggers and
constraints which are the basis of active databases.
Most, if not all, object-oriented application programs that
have database needs will benefit from using an OODB.

Ode is an example of an OODB built on C++.

(1997-12-07)
object-oriented design
(foldoc)
object-oriented design
OOD

(OOD) A design method in which a system is modelled
as a collection of cooperating objects and individual objects
are treated as instances of a class within a class hierarchy.
Four stages can be identified: identify the classes and objects,
identify their semantics, identify their relationships and
specify class and object interfaces and implementation.
Object-oriented design is one of the stages of {object-oriented
programming}.

Schlaer-Mellor is one approach to OOD.

["Object-oriented analysis and design with applications",
Grady Booch, 2nd ed., pub. Benjamin/Cummings, Redwood CA,
1994].

(1997-12-07)
object-oriented fortran
(foldoc)
Object-Oriented Fortran
OOF

(OOF) An object-oriented extension of Fortran,
in which data items can be grouped into objects, which can be
instantiated and executed in parallel.

It was available for Sun, Iris, iPSC, and nCUBE, but
is no longer supported.

E-mail: Donna Reese .

(2001-03-06)
object-oriented language
(foldoc)
object-oriented programming
object-oriented language
object-oriented programming language
OOP
OOPL

(OOP) The use of a class of programming
languages and techniques based on the concept of an "object"
which is a data structure (abstract data type) encapsulated
with a set of routines, called "methods", which operate on
the data. Operations on the data can __only__ be performed via
these methods, which are common to all objects that are
instances of a particular "class". Thus the interface to
objects is well defined, and allows the code implementing the
methods to be changed so long as the interface remains the
same.

Each class is a separate module and has a position in a
"class hierarchy". Methods or code in one class can be
passed down the hierarchy to a subclass or inherited from a
superclass. This is called "inheritance".

A procedure call is described as invoking a method on an
object (which effectively becomes the procedure's first
argument), and may optionally include other arguments. The
method name is looked up in the object's class to find out how
to perform that operation on the given object. If the method
is not defined for the object's class, it is looked for in its
superclass and so on up the class hierarchy until it is found
or there is no higher superclass.

OOP started with SIMULA-67 around 1970 and became
all-pervasive with the advent of C++, and later Java.
Another popular object-oriented programming language (OOPL) is
Smalltalk, a seminal example from Xerox's {Palo Alto
Research Center} (PARC). Others include Ada, {Object
Pascal}, Objective C, DRAGOON, BETA, Emerald, POOL,
Eiffel, Self, Oblog, ESP, LOOPS, POLKA, and
Python. Other languages, such as Perl and VB, permit,
but do not enforce OOP.

FAQ (http://iamwww.unibe.ch/~scg/OOinfo/FAQ/).
(http://zgdv.igd.fhg.de/papers/se/oop/).
(http://cuiwww.unige.ch/Chloe/OOinfo).

Usenet newsgroup: news:comp.object.

(2001-10-11)
object-oriented pascal
(foldoc)
Object Pascal
Object-Oriented Pascal

An object-oriented Pascal developed jointly by
Apple Computer and Niklaus Wirth.

["Object Pascal Report", Larry Tesler, Structured Language
World 9(3):10-17 (1985)].

(1994-10-28)
object-oriented polymorphism
(foldoc)
object-oriented polymorphism

The kind of polymorphism found in {object-oriented
programming} languages where a variable can refer to an object
whose class is not known exactly until run time. A method
can use a variable of a given class - call other methods on it,
pass it as an argument, etc. - without needing to know to which
subclass it refers, as long as its actual class is compatible with
those uses.

(2014-01-05)
object-oriented programming
(foldoc)
object-oriented programming
object-oriented language
object-oriented programming language
OOP
OOPL

(OOP) The use of a class of programming
languages and techniques based on the concept of an "object"
which is a data structure (abstract data type) encapsulated
with a set of routines, called "methods", which operate on
the data. Operations on the data can __only__ be performed via
these methods, which are common to all objects that are
instances of a particular "class". Thus the interface to
objects is well defined, and allows the code implementing the
methods to be changed so long as the interface remains the
same.

Each class is a separate module and has a position in a
"class hierarchy". Methods or code in one class can be
passed down the hierarchy to a subclass or inherited from a
superclass. This is called "inheritance".

A procedure call is described as invoking a method on an
object (which effectively becomes the procedure's first
argument), and may optionally include other arguments. The
method name is looked up in the object's class to find out how
to perform that operation on the given object. If the method
is not defined for the object's class, it is looked for in its
superclass and so on up the class hierarchy until it is found
or there is no higher superclass.

OOP started with SIMULA-67 around 1970 and became
all-pervasive with the advent of C++, and later Java.
Another popular object-oriented programming language (OOPL) is
Smalltalk, a seminal example from Xerox's {Palo Alto
Research Center} (PARC). Others include Ada, {Object
Pascal}, Objective C, DRAGOON, BETA, Emerald, POOL,
Eiffel, Self, Oblog, ESP, LOOPS, POLKA, and
Python. Other languages, such as Perl and VB, permit,
but do not enforce OOP.

FAQ (http://iamwww.unibe.ch/~scg/OOinfo/FAQ/).
(http://zgdv.igd.fhg.de/papers/se/oop/).
(http://cuiwww.unige.ch/Chloe/OOinfo).

Usenet newsgroup: news:comp.object.

(2001-10-11)
object-oriented programming language
(foldoc)
object-oriented programming
object-oriented language
object-oriented programming language
OOP
OOPL

(OOP) The use of a class of programming
languages and techniques based on the concept of an "object"
which is a data structure (abstract data type) encapsulated
with a set of routines, called "methods", which operate on
the data. Operations on the data can __only__ be performed via
these methods, which are common to all objects that are
instances of a particular "class". Thus the interface to
objects is well defined, and allows the code implementing the
methods to be changed so long as the interface remains the
same.

Each class is a separate module and has a position in a
"class hierarchy". Methods or code in one class can be
passed down the hierarchy to a subclass or inherited from a
superclass. This is called "inheritance".

A procedure call is described as invoking a method on an
object (which effectively becomes the procedure's first
argument), and may optionally include other arguments. The
method name is looked up in the object's class to find out how
to perform that operation on the given object. If the method
is not defined for the object's class, it is looked for in its
superclass and so on up the class hierarchy until it is found
or there is no higher superclass.

OOP started with SIMULA-67 around 1970 and became
all-pervasive with the advent of C++, and later Java.
Another popular object-oriented programming language (OOPL) is
Smalltalk, a seminal example from Xerox's {Palo Alto
Research Center} (PARC). Others include Ada, {Object
Pascal}, Objective C, DRAGOON, BETA, Emerald, POOL,
Eiffel, Self, Oblog, ESP, LOOPS, POLKA, and
Python. Other languages, such as Perl and VB, permit,
but do not enforce OOP.

FAQ (http://iamwww.unibe.ch/~scg/OOinfo/FAQ/).
(http://zgdv.igd.fhg.de/papers/se/oop/).
(http://cuiwww.unige.ch/Chloe/OOinfo).

Usenet newsgroup: news:comp.object.

(2001-10-11)
object-oriented sql
(foldoc)
Object-oriented SQL
OSQL

(OSQL) A functional language, a superset of
SQL, used in Hewlett-Packard's OpenODB database
system.

(1994-11-29)
object-oriented turing
(foldoc)
Object-Oriented Turing

An extension of Turing and a replacement for
Turing Plus by R.C. Holt , U Toronto,
1991. Object-Oriented Turing supports {imperative
programming}, object-oriented programming and {concurrent
programming}. It has modules, classes, {single
inheritance}, processes, exception handling and optional
machine-dependent programming.

There is an integrated environment under the X Window System
and a demo version (ftp://turing.toronto.edu/pub/turing).
Versions exist for Sun-4, MIPS, RS-6000 and others.

E-mail: .

["A Conceptual Framework for Software Development", Mancoridis
et al, eds, ACM SIGSCE Conference, Feb 1993, Indianapolis].
["Turing Reference Manual", 1992, ISBN 0-921598-15-7].

(2000-04-21)
real-time object-oriented modeling
(foldoc)
Real-Time Object-Oriented Modeling
ROOM Methodology

(ROOM Methodology)

(http://objectime.on.ca/ROOM.HTML).

[Summary?]

(1997-02-17)
technology of object-oriented languages and systems
(foldoc)
Technology of Object-Oriented Languages and Systems
TOOLS

(TOOLS) One of the oldest object-oriented
conferences, with 18 published proceedings volumes. TOOLS is
organised by Interactive Software Engineering.

(1995-12-29)

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