ANSI/ISO C++ Professional
Programmer's Handbook The precursors of object-oriented programming can be traced back to the late 1960's: Classes, inheritance and virtual member functions were integral features of Simula67, a programming language that was mainly used for writing event-driven simulations. When Smalltalk first appeared back in 1972, it offered a pure object-oriented programming environment. In fact, Smalltalk defined object-oriented programming. This style of programming was so innovative and revolutionary at the time that it took more than a decade for it to become a standard in the software industry. Undoubtedly, the emergence of C++ in the early '80s provided the most considerable contribution to this revolution.
The Origins of C++ In 1979, a young engineer at Bell (now AT&T) Labs, Bjarne Stroustrup, started to experiment with extensions to C to make it a better tool for implementing large-scale projects. In those days, an average project consisted of tens of thousands of lines of code (LOC).
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