This, announces the availability of the interpreter, manual,
examples, and thesis for the programming language ALLOY v2.0.
ALLOY now completely unifies its functional and object oriented aspects.
Also, its supports a much richer library.
ALLOY is high level, parallel, flexible and efficient.
ALLOY combines serial/parallel ev., eager/lazy ev., single/multiple solutions
and parallel object oriented programming in a remarkably simple framework.
Example programs ready for execution include:
1) factorial, partition sort, FP (highly parallel)
2) fibonacci sequence, prime numbers (eager or lazy)
3) systolic sort, hamming network (clear flow of data)
4) list member, tree leave, list permutation, n queens (multiple solutions)
5) queue, stack, faa, semaphores, dinning philosophers (objects)
6) prolog package, prolog/parlog programming styles (flexibility)
Part of ALLOY is explained in:
[MH90] Thanasis Mitsolides and Malcolm Harrison. Generators and the
replicator control structure in the parallel environment of ALLOY.
In ACM SIGPLAN '90 Conference on Programming Language Design and
Implementation, pages 189--196, White Plains, New York, June 1990.
The abstract of the ALLOY manual is appended at the end of this message.
The sources, manual, example programs, benchmarks, and thesis of ALLOY
are available for anonymous FTP from cs.nyu.edu (128.122.140.24)
I hope you will find ALLOY interesting.
I will be glad to answer your comments!
Thank you,
Thanasis
===============================================================================
ABSTRACT
ALLOY is a higher level parallel programming language appropriate
for programming massively parallel computing systems. It is based
on a combination of ideas from functional, object oriented and
logic programming languages.
The result is a language that can directly support functional,
object oriented and logic programming styles in a unified and
controlled framework. Evaluating modes support serial or parallel
execution, eager or lazy evaluation, non-determinism or multiple
solutions etc. ALLOY is simple as it only requires 29 primitives
in all (half of which for Object Oriented Programming support).
This article, starts with a formal definition of the small ALLOY
kernel proceeds with the definition of some useful libraries and
concludes with examples which demonstrate its expressiveness and
clarity.
Programming language ALLOY is located on system spunky.cs.nyu.edu
directory ~mitsolid/alloy. This article can be found in dvi and
ascii form on subdirectory doc, The examples presented can be
found in subdirectory progs. The interpreter is executable file
alloy. All the above and the sources of the ALLOY interpreter are
available for anonymous ftp on system cs.nyu.edu directory
pub/local/alloy.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Internet: ········@cs.nyu.edu (···················@relay.cs.net)
UUCP : ...!uunet!cmcl2!cs!mitsolid
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Internet: ········@cs.nyu.edu (···················@relay.cs.net)
UUCP : ...!uunet!cmcl2!cs!mitsolid
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--
=========================== MODERATOR ==============================
Steve Stevenson {steve,·····@hubcap.clemson.edu
Department of Computer Science, comp.parallel
Clemson University, Clemson, SC 29634-1906 (803)656-5880.mabell