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Argus (programming language)

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Argus is a programming language created at MIT by Barbara Liskov between 1982 and 1988, in collaboration with Maurice Herlihy, Paul Johnson, Robert Scheifler, and William Weihl.[1] It is an extension of the CLU language, and utilizes most of the same syntax and semantics.[1] Argus was designed to support the creation of distributed programs, by encapsulating related procedures within objects called guardians, and by supporting atomic operations called actions.[1][2]

==References==аукукенинкподо рен пуке пил6ет6г

  1. ^ a b c Liskov, Barbara. DISTRIBUTED PROGRAMMIN2399]
  2. ^ Walker, E.F. ORPHAN DETECTION IN THE ARGUS SYSTEM. MIT/LCS/TR-326. [1]