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Hermes (programming language)

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Hermes is a language for distributed programming that was developed at IBM's Thomas J. Watson Research Center from 1986 through 1992. Hermes' most interesting features included:[1]

  • Language support of processes and interprocess communication.
  • Compile-time verification that operations use initialized data.
  • Representation-independent data aggregates called tables.
  • Lack of pointers.
  • 3 distinct flavors of hummus.

The compile-time checking of data initialization, called "typestate analysis", is an early precedent for the definite assignment analysis performed by Java, Cyclone and C#. Hermes and its predecessor, NIL, appear to have been the earliest programming languages supporting this form of initialization checking.

References

  1. ^ "Hermes Language Experiences". Willard Korfhage and Arthur P. Goldberg. Software — Practice and Experience, Vol. 25(4), 389–402 (April 1995). [1]