- "The History of Java Technology". Retrieved October 6, 2012.
- ^ ab "Java 7 and Java 8 Releases by date". Retrieved March 3, 2015.
- ^ Java 5.0 added several new language features (the enhanced for loop, autoboxing,varargs and annotations), after they were introduced in the similar (and competing) C#language [1] [2]
- ^ Gosling, James; and McGilton, Henry (May 1996). "The Java Language Environment".
- ^ Gosling, James; Joy, Bill; Steele, Guy; and Bracha, Gilad. "The Java Language Specification, 2nd Edition".
- ^ "The A-Z of Programming Languages: Modula-3". Computerworld.com.au. Retrieved2010-06-09.
- ^ Niklaus Wirth stated on a number of public occasions, e.g. in a lecture at the Polytechnic Museum, Moscow in September, 2005 (several independent first-hand accounts in Russian exist, e.g. one with an audio recording: Filippova, Elena (September 22, 2005). "Niklaus Wirth's lecture at the Polytechnic Museum in Moscow".), that the Sun Java design team licenced the Oberon compiler sources a number of years prior to the release of Java and examined it: a (relative) compactness, type safety, garbage collection, no multiple inheritance for classes -- all these key overall design features are shared by Java and Oberon.
- ^ Patrick Naughton cites Objective-C as a strong influence on the design of the Java programming language, stating that notable direct derivatives include Java interfaces (derived from Objective-C's protocol) and primitive wrapper classes. [3]
- ^ TechMetrix Research (1999). "History of Java" (PDF). Java Application Servers Report.
The project went ahead under the name "green" and the language was based on an old model of UCSD Pascal, which makes it possible to generate interpretive code
- ^ "A Conversation with James Gosling – ACM Queue". Queue.acm.org. 2004-08-31. Retrieved 2010-06-09.
- ^ "Facebook Q&A: Hack brings static typing to PHP world". InfoWorld. 2014-03-26. Retrieved 2015-01-11.
- ^ Gosling et al. 2014, p. 1.
- ^ "Write once, run anywhere?". Computer Weekly. 2002-05-02. Retrieved 2009-07-27.
- ^ ab c "1.2 Design Goals of the Java™ Programming Language". Oracle. 1999-01-01. Retrieved 2013-01-14.
vaibhav chopade
Thursday, 18 June 2015
vaibhavchopadekarmala
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)