CSE 341 -- Smalltalk Intro

Background

The Learning Research Group at Xerox Palo Alto Research Center (PARC) developed Smalltalk as a language for the Dynabook, during the 70s and early 80s. The Dynabook was a yet-to-be-developed "laptop of the future." Alan Kay, Dan Ingalls, Adele Goldberg were key players in the development of Smalltalk. They selected simulation as the metaphor for programming the Dynabook. Smalltalk was influenced by Lisp, Simula, Ivan Sutherland's Sketchpad.

Characteristics of Smalltalk-72:

Characteristics of Smalltalk-80 (now also known just as Smalltalk): Smalltalk is now a commercial product (ParcPlace/Digitalk, Object Technology International, IBM Smalltalk). It has been a hot item on Wall Street and the MIS world ... although it may be eclipsed by Java in the future.

From the point of view of studying programming languages, it is an excellent example of a pure object-oriented language.

Smalltalk influenced the development of other object-oriented languages, such as C++, Objective C, CLOS, Java, and our own Cecil language, as well as others.


Language Overview

We'll now give a quick overview of the language, via a few small examples. Basic concepts: Syntax: Precedence:

Note that we will very frequently be composing messages -- for example

Time now hours + 1
first sends the message now to the class Time, which returns the current time (an instance of Time). We then send this object the message hours, which returns an integer. Then we send the message + with the argument 1 to this integer, returning another integer (which will be the current hour plus 1).


Example 1: Stack

First we define a new class. See p 54 of the Winston book for how to do this in the Smalltalk environment. Also see p 171 for how to save the code in a file and read it back in again. Object subclass: #Stack instanceVariableNames: 'anArray top' classVariableNames: '' poolDictionaries: '' Now define some methods: push: item top := top+1. anArray at: top put: item pop | item | item := anArray at: top. top := top-1. ^ item setsize: n anArray := Array new: n. top := 0. Some code to test the stack: S := Stack new. S setsize: 10. S inspect. S push: 'hi there'. S push: 3.14159. S pop Adding error checking and growing: push: item | save | top := top+1. top > anArray size ifTrue: "anArray is about to overflow. make a new array twice as big, and copy the old values into it" [save := anArray. anArray := Array new: 2*save size. 1 to: save size do: [:k | anArray at: k put: (save at: k)]]. anArray at: top put: item pop | item | self isEmpty ifTrue: [self error: 'trying to pop an empty stack']. item := anArray at: top. top := top-1. ^ item isEmpty ^ top=0