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Concepts, Techniques, and Models of Computer Programming

Concepts, Techniques, and Models of Computer Programming

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Concepts, Techniques, and Models of Computer Programming Hardback - 2004

by Peter Van Roy, Seif Haridi

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Concepts, Techniques, and Models of Computer Programming

Peter Van Roy & Seif Haridi The MIT Press, 2004 ISBN 0262220695 / 9780262220699 Language: English

Book Description

A comprehensive and unifying exploration of programming concepts across paradigms, this landmark text presents a model‑driven approach to understanding computation. Van Roy and Haridi introduce a systematic framework that spans functional, logic, object‑oriented, concurrent, and distributed programming, emphasizing the underlying principles that connect them. The book's "CTM" methodology has become influential for its clarity, rigor, and ability to reveal the deep structure of programming languages and computational models. This copy includes a personal, signed dedication from Peter Van Roy to Hassan Aït‑Kaci, acknowledging Aït‑Kaci as "one of the Great Pioneers of the ideas in this book" and expressing gratitude for their time together at PRL — a rare and field‑significant provenance element. From the Hassan Aït‑Kaci technical library.

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Reader reviews for Concepts, Techniques, and Models of Computer Programming

From the publisher

Teaching the science and the technology of programming as a unified discipline that shows the deep relationships between programming paradigms.

This innovative text presents computer programming as a unified discipline in a way that is both practical and scientifically sound. The book focuses on techniques of lasting value and explains them precisely in terms of a simple abstract machine. The book presents all major programming paradigms in a uniform framework that shows their deep relationships and how and where to use them together. After an introduction to programming concepts, the book presents both well-known and lesser-known computation models ("programming paradigms"). Each model has its own set of techniques and each is included on the basis of its usefulness in practice. The general models include declarative programming, declarative concurrency, message-passing concurrency, explicit state, object-oriented programming, shared-state concurrency, and relational programming. Specialized models include graphical user interface programming, distributed programming, and constraint programming. Each model is based on its kernel language--a simple core language that consists of a small number of programmer-significant elements. The kernel languages are introduced progressively, adding concepts one by one, thus showing the deep relationships between different models. The kernel languages are defined precisely in terms of a simple abstract machine. Because a wide variety of languages and programming paradigms can be modeled by a small set of closely related kernel languages, this approach allows programmer and student to grasp the underlying unity of programming. The book has many program fragments and exercises, all of which can be run on the Mozart Programming System, an Open Source software package that features an interactive incremental development environment.

About the author

Peter Van Roy is Professor in the Department of Computing Science and Engineering at Universit catholique de Louvain, at Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium.

Seif Haridi is Professor of Computer Systems in the Department of Microelectronics and Information Technology at the Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden, and Chief Scientific Advisor of the Swedish Institute of Computer Science.

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