The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (30 December 2018):
Sather
/Say-ther/ (Named after the Sather Tower at UCB,
as opposed to the Eiffel Tower).
An interactive object-oriented language designed by Steve
M. Omohundro at ICSI in 1991. Sather has simple syntax,
similar to Eiffel, but it is non-proprietary and faster.
Sather 0.2 was nearly a subset of Eiffel 2.0, but Sather 1.0
adds many distinctive features: parameterised classes,
multiple inheritance, statically-checked strong typing,
garbage collection. The compiler generates C as an
intermediate language. There are versions for most
workstations.
Sather attempts to retain much of Eiffel's theoretical
cleanliness and simplicity while achieving the efficiency of
C++. The compiler generates efficient and portable C code
which is easily integrated with existing code.
A variety of development tools including a debugger and
browser based on gdb and a GNU Emacs development
environment have also been written. There is also a class
library with several hundred classes that implement a variety
of basic data structures and numerical, geometric,
connectionist, statistical, and graphical abstractions. The
authors would like to encourage contributions to the library
and hope to build a large collection of efficient,
well-written, well-tested classes in a variety of areas of
computer science.
Sather runs on Sun-4, HP9000/300, Decstation 5000,
MIPS, Sony News 3000, Sequent/Dynix, SCO SysVR3.2,
NeXT, Linux.
See also dpSather, pSather, Sather-K.
(ftp://ftp.icsi.berkeley.edu/pub/sather).
E-mail: .
Mailing list: sather-request@icsi.berkeley.edu.
(1995-04-26)