OOPSLA

Annual computing conference From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Object-Oriented Programming, Systems, Languages & Applications (OOPSLA) is an annual ACM research conference. OOPSLA mainly takes place in the United States, while the sister conference of OOPSLA, ECOOP, is typically held in Europe. It is operated by the Special Interest Group for Programming Languages (SIGPLAN) group of the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM).

AbbreviationOOPSLA
PublisherACM
History1986–present
Quick facts Abbreviation, Discipline ...
OOPSLA
AbbreviationOOPSLA
DisciplineObject-oriented programming
Publication details
PublisherACM
History1986–present
Frequencyannual
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OOPSLA has been instrumental in helping object-oriented programming develop into a mainstream programming paradigm.[citation needed] It has also helped incubate a number of related topics, including design patterns, refactoring, aspect-oriented programming, model-driven engineering, agile software development, and domain specific languages.

The first OOPSLA conference was held in Portland, Oregon, in 1986. As of 2010, OOPSLA became a part of the SPLASH conference.[1] SPLASH stands for Systems, Programming, Languages, and Applications: Software for Humanity.

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