Newsqueak

Newsqueak is a concurrent programming language for writing application software with interactive graphical user interfaces.

Newsqueak
ParadigmConcurrent
Designed byRob Pike
DeveloperBell Labs
Typing disciplineStrong
Influenced by
C, CSP
Influenced
Alef, Go, Limbo, Rust

Newsqueak's syntax and semantics are influenced by the C language, but its approach to concurrency was inspired by C. A. R. Hoare's communicating sequential processes (CSP). However, in Newsqueak, channels are first-class objects, with dynamic process creation and dynamic channel creation.

Newsqueak was developed from an earlier, smaller, language, called Squeak (not to be confused with the Smalltalk implementation Squeak). It was developed by Luca Cardelli and Rob Pike at Bell Labs in the first half of the 1980s as a language for implementing graphical user interfaces. Both languages were presented as "a language for communicating with mice": their main aim was to model the concurrent nature of programs interacting with multiple input devices, viz., keyboards and mice.[1][2]

The ideas present in Newsqueak were further developed in the programming languages Alef, Limbo, and Go.

See also

References

  1. Cardelli, Luca; Pike, Rob (1985). Squeak: a language for communicating with mice (PDF). ACM SIGGRAPH.
  2. Pike, Rob. Newsqueak: A Language for Communicating with Mice (PDF) (Technical report). Bell Labs. Computing Science Technical Report No. 143.


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