Little Smalltalk
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Little Smalltalk is a non-standard dialect of the Smalltalk programming language invented by Timothy Budd. It was originally described in the book: "A Little Smalltalk", Timothy Budd, Addison-Wesley, 1987, ISBN 0-201-10698-1.
The Little Smalltalk system was the first Smalltalk interpreter produced outside of Xerox PARC. Although it lacked many of the features of the original Smalltalk-80 system, it helped popularize the ideas of object-oriented programming, virtual machines, and byte-code interpreters. Timothy Budd later rewrote Little Smalltalk in Java, and distributes it as the SmallWorld system.
The original releases are under a variety of licenses. They are now maintained by Danny Reinhold via the Little Smalltalk project. Recently work on a new major version has begun. This differs from earlier releases by providing support for graphical applications, a foreign function interface, and numerous integrated tools.
[edit] License / Copyright
- Version 1 - Must attribute original source and keep copyright notice in source files.
- Version 2 - Public Domain
- Version 3 - Public Domain
- Version 4 - Free for non-commercial use
- Version 5 - Released under an MIT style license, thanks to Timothy Budd.