As Sam Harbison writes in his book Modula-3,
Modula-3 is a member of the Pascal family of languages. Designed in the late 1980s at Digital Equipment Corporation and Olivetti, Modula-3 corrects many of the deficiencies of Pascal and Modula-2 for practical software engineering. In particular, Modula-3 keeps the simplicity of type safety of the earlier languages, while providing new facilities for exception handling, concurrency, object-oriented programming, and automatic garbage collection. Modula-3 is both a practical implementation language for large software projects and an excellent teaching language.New items:
1995 Modula-3 Users Group Meeting Announcement, OOPSLA'95, Austin, Texas
Introductory articles, tutorials, and answers to frequent questions:
Additional information is available on the following topics:
Several documents mentioned in the bibliography are also available in Postscript.
Last modified on Fri Oct 6 15:54:11 PDT 1995 by heydon modified on Mon Sep 25 11:07:45 PDT 1995 by najork modified on Fri Jul 7 08:48:46 PDT 1995 by kalsow modified on Wed Feb 12 12:48:44 PST 1992 by muller