Bi-weekly on Wednesday evening
Starting January 24, 2001
Modern society is becoming very dependent upon software. Our transport systems, financial systems, medical systems and defense systems all depend to a very large degree upon software. As a consequence the safety of many human lives and much property now depends upon the reliable functioning of software. Moreover, the fall in the cost of hardware has now made possible the development of large software systems.Ada-Belgium is a non-profit volunteer organization whose purpose is to promote the use in Belgium of the Ada programming language, the first ISO standardized object-oriented language.Ada is a programming language of special value in the development of large programs which must work reliably. [...] Ada is a modern programming language suitable for those application areas which benefit from the discipline of organized development, that is, Software Engineering; it is a general purpose language with special applicability to real-time and embedded systems. [...]
Although Ada was originally designed to provide a single flexible yet portable language for real-time embedded systems to meet the needs of the US DoD, its domain of application has expanded to include many other areas, such as large-scale information systems, distributed systems, scientific computation, and systems programming. Furthermore, its user base has expanded to include all major defense agencies of the Western world, the whole of the aerospace community and increasingly many areas in civil and private sectors such as telecommunications, process control and monitoring systems. Indeed, the expansion in the civil sector is such that civil applications now generate the dominant revenues of many vendors.
(from "Ada 95 Rationale: The Language, The Standard Libraries", John Barnes (ed.), Lecture Notes in Computer Science, vol. 1247, Springer-Verlag, 1997, ISBN 3-540-63143-7)
Early 2001, Ada-Belgium will run a course teaching Ada 95, at the premises of the U.L.B. in Brussels, bi-weekly on Wednesday evenings starting on January 24, 2001.
This is an updated re-run of the highly successful Ada course organized in the fall of 1998.
Here you will find info on:
This free Ada course is an opportunity not to be missed! Do not delay to register!
Looking forward to meet many of you in Brussels.
Dirk Craeynest
Ada-Belgium Board
ada-belgium-board@cs.kuleuven.ac.be
Wed 24 Jan 2001 - Introduction to Ada - part 1 Wed 7 Feb 2001 - Introduction to Ada - part 2 Wed 21 Feb 2001 - Object-Oriented Programming in Ada - part 1 Wed 7 Mar 2001 - Object-Oriented Programming in Ada - part 2 Wed 21 Mar 2001 - Parallel Programming in Ada Wed 28 Mar 2001 - Distributed Programming in Adamore sessions might be scheduled.
Note: during the week of 14-18 May, 2001, Ada-Belgium co-organizes the 6th International Conference on Reliable Software Technologies - Ada-Europe'2001.
The introductory course will cover most of the core language, except for
the material covered in the subsequent modules, such as object oriented
features and tasking.
The course will essentially be taught as a sequence of simple programs
showing common aspects of programming in Ada.
We will first walk to the simple predefined types and see how
declarations are controlled.
The power of Ada conditional statements and loop statements will be
illustrated. The introduction of new types and subtypes will be
explained, including arrays, records and pointers.
Procedures and functions will than be introduced, first embedded in the
program itself and than defined outside a program ready to be used by as
many programs as needed. This means the introduction of packages and
exceptions.
The power of generic units will be shown and we will discuss the input
output possibilities of the predefined packages Ada.Text_Io,
Ada.Sequential_Io and Ada.Direct_Io.
References
One of the major contributions of the 95 version of the Ada language is certainly the way it addresses Object-Oriented Design and Development.
The two sessions will present how OO concepts have been added to the language on top of existing ones (types, derivations, etc...). No particular knowledge of OO is required to follow these sessions since the basic concepts will be briefly presented.
Many more programmers are having to work in multi-threaded environments today: most modern operating systems support threads (or light-weight processes) to some extent. The problem with threads is that they are not standard and so are not portable. Every operating system has a differing set of application programmers' interfaces (APIs) and frequently differing scheduling and priority rules. Thread programming is also notoriously difficult to manage in C and difficult to encapsulate in C++. Neither C nor C++ provides any support for important issues in multi-threaded programming features such as re-entrant functions and interprocess communication (IPC).
Unlike C++ Ada defines a model for concurrent programming as part of the language itself. Few other languages (Occam and Java are examples) provide language level concurrency; other languages (Modula-3) provide a concurrency model through the use of standard library abstractions. In Ada there are two base components: the task which encapsulates a concurrent process, and the protected type, which is a data structure that provides guarded access to its data. These features can be used to develop responsive, high-performance applications utilizing one of the few truly cross-platform models for concurrent processing.
The real-time systems annex provides additional facilities for programming in either a hard or a soft real-time environment. The main thrust of this annex is to provide programmers of real-time systems with an environment which provides fixed, predictable scheduling of tasks and interrupts within an application.
(from "Ada 95 for C and C++ Programmers", Simon Johnston, Addison Wesley Longman, 1997, ISBN 0-201-40363-3)
As presented at the Ada-Belgium'97 Seminar on Developing Distributed Applications, several different approaches are available. The most important ones are using CORBA or the Ada 95 distributed systems annex (or both).
The Ada 95 programming language is a powerful and flexible language that provides a safe environment for creating reliable software. The OMG Common Object Request Broker Architecture (CORBA) is a flexible environment for creating potentially distributed software components. The marriage of these two technologies results in a uniquely powerful environment for creating high performance, reliable, distributed software components.
(from "Ada-Belgium'97 - Call for Participation", Ada-Belgium, 1997)
Ada 95 is the first general-purpose language to provide a standard distributed programming paradigm. By combining the distributed and object-oriented features of Ada 95, it is possible to create an application where objects are physically distributed over a network of machines, without having to interface to any low-level communication layer. Likewise, by combining the distributed and real-time capabilities of Ada 95, it is possible to design applications which meet real-time constraints in a distributed environment.
GNAT, and more specifically GLADE (GNAT Library for Ada Distributed Execution), is the first commercial implementation of the distributed Ada 95 programming model. This implementation allows a distributed application to run on a network of heterogeneous machines, to support different network protocols, and to provide replication and fault-tolerance.
(from "GLADE - Distributed systems in Ada 95", ACT Europe, 1998)
Contents of this session:
We plan to provide copies of the presentations at each course session.
In addition, we still have a small number of documentation sets of the Ada-Belgium'98 Seminar (theme "Concurrency & Real-Time") and the Ada-Belgium'99 Seminar (theme "Ada 95 Works!") for direct members not attending these seminars (as availability permits). These sets contain, a.o., printed proceedings with papers related to the presentations, copies of slides, and additional documents and papers.
Please return the Registration Form as soon as possible.
As mentioned above, for direct Ada-Belgium members registration includes
the option to receive a free copy of the full 4-disc Ada and Software
Engineering CD-ROM set, containing a.o. several editions of two Ada 95
compilers: the public GNAT distribution from ACT, for lots of platforms,
and the ObjectAda Special Edition from Aonix, for Windows 95 and NT.
A limited supply of additional material that was distributed at the
Ada-Belgium'98 and '99 Seminars is also available for direct members on
their request (see above and registration form).
Others registering for (a) course module(s) can optionally become Ada-Belgium members, and hence also receive the free CD-ROMs and documentation.
Ada-Belgium Secretariat Attn. Prof. R. Devillers c/o Université Libre de Bruxelles (U.L.B.) Boulevard du Triomphe / Triomflaan Campus de la Plaine, CP 212, B-1050 Brussels Phone (32)-2-650.56.11, Fax (32)-2-650.56.09 E-mail: ada-belgium-board@cs.kuleuven.ac.be
We would like to thank our sponsors for their continued support of our activities: ACT Europe, John Robinson & Associates, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven (K.U.Leuven), Koninklijke Militaire School / Ecole Royale Militaire (K.M.S./E.R.M.), Offis nv/sa, Rational Software Corporation, Top Graph'X, and Université Libre de Bruxelles (U.L.B.).
Information on this and other Ada-Belgium events is available on the Internet at the Ada-Belgium World-Wide-Web pages and is updated regularly. Check out URL
http://www.cs.kuleuven.ac.be/~dirk/ada-belgium/events/local.html
To the Ada-Belgium home page.
To the Ada Course Home Page.
Last update: 2001/02/16.
Dirk Craeynest