Cincom Systems' software programming language wins Dynamic Language Shootout Competition
A software application built on Cincom Smalltalk won the 2008 Object-Oriented Programming (OOP) Dynamic Language Shootout competition, held in Munich, Germany. Sigs-Datacom, in conjunction with the German magazine JavaSPEKTRUM, organised the contest for the OOP 2008 conference.
Cincom Systems of Australia’s Cincom Smalltalk is a software programming language that enables developers to build applications quickly and efficiently.
OOP is an established IT conference in the European software community dating back 17 years. The conference addresses the whole spectrum of software-development topics including information on the recent trends and applications.
The Shootout Challenge
Participants were challenged to programme a Scrabble-like game using standard technology of the chosen platform. Programmers those participated used the dynamic programming languages Cincom Smalltalk, Ruby, Python, Perl, Groovy, Scheme, Lisp and others. Criteria for the application included accuracy, size, clarity and elegance.
The winner
Thorsten Seitz, the winner, used Cincom Smalltalk VisualWorks 7.5, the Smalltalk toolset for building instantly portable server, web-based and client-server applications; and Seaside 2.8 for his winning application.
Selected for quality, speed, elegance
The winning application was selected for its algorithmic quality, speed, relatively small size and visual elegance of the Seaside-based user-interface. Competition judges shared the opinion that Thorsten's Smalltalk-based submission won with a distance ahead of second place, a Ruby application.
Smalltalk programmers typically solve a given problem faster and write one-half to one-third of the code produced by programmers using other languages.
Cincom Smalltalk
Cincom Smalltalk is a cross-platform development technology that helps developers build applications quickly and efficiently — from highly scalable web applications to classic client/server systems.
17-Mar-2008