- Simula - Wikipedia
Simula is the name of two simulation programming languages, Simula I and Simula 67, developed in the 1960s at the Norwegian Computing Center in Oslo, by Ole-Johan Dahl and Kristen Nygaard
- Applications - Simula Technology Inc.
Founded in 1990, headquartered in Taiwan, Simula’s mission is to lead the component manufacturing industry with deep technical know-how, relentless innovation through R D and exceptional customer service
- Simular - Computer Use Agents Workflow Automation
Simular AI delivers open-source, intelligent AI agents powered by leading research to automate computer tasks, streamline workflows, and enhance productivity Transform your digital experience today!
- Simula: The World‘s First Object-Oriented Programming Language
Simula is considered the first object-oriented programming (OOP) language, created in the 1960s by Norwegian computer scientists Ole-Johan Dahl and Kristen Nygaard
- An Introduction to Programming in Simula - GitHub Pages
This book describes how to write and understand programs written in the language SIMULA The definition used is the 1985 SIMULA Standard, which extends and clarifies the language previously known as SIMULA 67 The 67 stood for 1967, the year in which this earlier version was first defined
- The Simula Programming Language - University of Michigan
Although SIMULA never became widely used, the language has been highly influential on modern programming methodololy Among other things SIMULA introduced important Object-Oriented programming concepts like classes and objects, inheretance and dynamic binding
- Simula - Guide: History, Origin, and More - History-Computer
Simula, an acronym for Simulation Language, is touted as the first object-oriented programming language created by Norwegian developers Ole-Johan Dahl and Kristen Nygaard in 1962 when determining how programs can model or simulate the world as seen by computer users
- What is Simula - Sim4edu
Simula is a simulation programming language developed as an extension of Algol-60 by Ole-Johan Dahl (†2002) and Kristen Nygaard (†2002) in the 1960's As a simulation language, it has pioneered the process-interaction approach to discrete-event simulation (DES), which is often also called a "process-oriented" approach
|