Dennis Lee Bieber wrote: > On 10 Sep 2005 05:36:08 EDT, Tim Daneliuk <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > declaimed the following in comp.lang.python: > > > >>On a more general note, for all the promises made over 3 decades about >>how OO was the answer to our problems, we have yet to see quantum > > > OO goes back /that/ far? (2 decades, yes, I might even go 2.5 > decades for academia <G>). My college hadn't even started "structured > programming" (beyond COBOL's PERFORM statement) by the time I graduated > in 1980. Well, okay... SmallTalk... But for most of the "real world", OO > became a known concept with C++ mid to late 80s. >
OO ideas predate C++ considerably. The idea of encapsulation and abstract data types goes back to the 1960s IIRC. I should point out that OO isn't particularly worse than other paradigms for claiming to be "The One True Thing". It's been going on for almost a half century. I've commented on this previously: http://www.tundraware.com/Technology/Bullet/ -- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Tim Daneliuk [EMAIL PROTECTED] PGP Key: http://www.tundraware.com/PGP/ -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list