Biblio

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2014-10-24
Nistor, Ligia, Kurilova, Darya, Balzer, Stephanie, Chung, Benjamin, Potanin, Alex, Aldrich, Jonathan.  2013.  Wyvern: A Simple, Typed, and Pure Object-oriented Language. Proceedings of the 5th Workshop on MechAnisms for SPEcialization, Generalization and inHerItance. :9–16.
The simplest and purest practical object-oriented language designs today are seen in dynamically-typed languages, such as Smalltalk and Self. Static types, however, have potential benefits for productivity, security, and reasoning about programs. In this paper, we describe the design of Wyvern, a statically typed, pure object-oriented language that attempts to retain much of the simplicity and expressiveness of these iconic designs. Our goals lead us to combine pure object-oriented and functional abstractions in a simple, typed setting. We present a foundational object-based language that we believe to be as close as one can get to simple typed lambda calculus while keeping object-orientation. We show how this foundational language can be translated to the typed lambda calculus via standard encodings. We then define a simple extension to this language that introduces classes and show that classes are no more than sugar for the foundational object-based language. Our future intention is to demonstrate that modules and other object-oriented features can be added to our language as not more than such syntactical extensions while keeping the object-oriented core as pure as possible. The design of Wyvern closely follows both historical and modern ideas about the essence of object-orientation, suggesting a new way to think about a minimal, practical, typed core language for objects.
2015-01-12
Nistor, Ligia, Kurilova, Darya, Balzer, Stephanie, Chung, Benjamin, Potanin, Alex, Aldrich, Jonathan.  2013.  Wyvern: A Simple, Typed, and Pure Object-Oriented Language. Workshop on Mechanisms for Specialization, Generalization, and Inheritance (MASPEGHI), 2013.

The simplest and purest practical object-oriented language designs
today are seen in dynamically-typed languages, such as Smalltalk
and Self. Static types, however, have potential benefits for productivity,
security, and reasoning about programs. In this paper, we describe
the design of Wyvern, a statically typed, pure object-oriented
language that attempts to retain much of the simplicity and expressiveness
of these iconic designs.
Our goals lead us to combine pure object-oriented and functional
abstractions in a simple, typed setting. We present a foundational
object-based language that we believe to be as close as
one can get to simple typed lambda calculus while keeping objectorientation.
We show how this foundational language can be translated
to the typed lambda calculus via standard encodings. We then
define a simple extension to this language that introduces classes
and show that classes are no more than sugar for the foundational
object-based language. Our future intention is to demonstrate that
modules and other object-oriented features can be added to our language
as not more than such syntactical extensions while keeping
the object-oriented core as pure as possible.
The design of Wyvern closely follows both historical and modern
ideas about the essence of object-orientation, suggesting a new
way to think about a minimal, practical, typed core language for
objects.

2016-12-07
Ligia Nistor, Darya Kurilova, Stephanie Balzer, Benjamin Chung, Alex Potanin, Jonathan Aldrich.  2013.  Wyvern: a simple, typed, and pure object-oriented language. MASPEGHI '13 Proceedings of the 5th Workshop on MechAnisms for SPEcialization, Generalization and inHerItance.

The simplest and purest practical object-oriented language designs today are seen in dynamically-typed languages, such as Smalltalk and Self. Static types, however, have potential benefits for productivity, security, and reasoning about programs. In this paper, we describe the design of Wyvern, a statically typed, pure object-oriented language that attempts to retain much of the simplicity and expressiveness of these iconic designs.

Our goals lead us to combine pure object-oriented and functional abstractions in a simple, typed setting. We present a foundational object-based language that we believe to be as close as one can get to simple typed lambda calculus while keeping object-orientation. We show how this foundational language can be translated to the typed lambda calculus via standard encodings. We then define a simple extension to this language that introduces classes and show that classes are no more than sugar for the foundational object-based language. Our future intention is to demonstrate that modules and other object-oriented features can be added to our language as not more than such syntactical extensions while keeping the object-oriented core as pure as possible.

The design of Wyvern closely follows both historical and modern ideas about the essence of object-orientation, suggesting a new way to think about a minimal, practical, typed core language for objects.