[[Property:title|Differences between ETL 2nd printing and Eiffel Software implementation]] [[Property:link_title|]] [[Property:weight|-9]] [[Property:uuid|fc1e73f4-5646-aa41-e7fe-97dc6f3ceb04]] {{seealso|See also: [[Differences between standard ECMA-367 and Eiffel Software implementation|Differences between standard ECMA-367 and Eiffel Software implementation]] }} ==Added classes== * New basic classes have been added: INTEGER_8, INTEGER_16, INTEGER_64 and WIDE_CHARACTER.{{seealso|[[Differences between standard ECMA-367 and Eiffel Software implementation|Differences between standard ECMA-367 and Eiffel Software implementation]] }} ==Added classes== * New basic classes have been added: INTEGER_8, INTEGER_16, INTEGER_64 and WIDE_CHARACTER. INTEGER is now specified as having a 32 bits representation * New TUPLE, ROUTINE, PROCEDURE and FUNCTION classes required by the agent mechanism. ==Added keywords== * Precursor * reference: new keyword to specify that a type is used as a reference type. * agent: new keyword used by the agent mechanism. * create: Instead of using the famous exclamation mark to create an instance of a class, you can use the keyword create. Below you will find a correspondence table between the old and the new syntaxes. The old syntax is still valid, but at some points Eiffel Software will remove it from its implementation: {| |- | Old syntax | New syntax |- | !! a | create a |- | !! a.make | create a.make |- | !B! a | create {B} a |- | !B! a.make | create {B} a.make |} * note: replacement for the keyword indexing. * attribute: new keyword to declare attribute body. * attached: new keyword to specify attached types and object tests. * detachable: new keyword to specify detachable types. ==Added semantics== * [[ET: Genericity and Arrays|Generic creation]] * Expression creation: you can now create an object within an expression. For example, you want to create an object and pass it as an argument to a function. Whereas you had to create a local variable, create the object and pass it to the function, you now simply need to pass to the function the creation expression. Here is a small example: {| |- | Old method | New method |- | local a: STRING do !! a.make (10) f (a) end | do f (create {STRING}.make (10)) end |} This is also very useful since it can improve the power of assertions. * Mutually recursive constraints: one can now write class A [H, G->H] or class B [H -> C, G -> ARRAY [H]]. As a result, the declaration A [D, E] is valid only if E is a descendant of D. Similarly, the declaration B [E, ARRAY [D]] is not valid, if E is a descendant of D. * [[ET: Other Mechanisms|Tuples]] * [[ET: Agents|Agents]] * Feature access:
local value: INTEGER do value := {MY_CLASS}.value end
The previous call is valid, if and only if: ** value is a feature representing a constant of a basic type (INTEGER, DOUBLE or CHARACTER) ** value is a C/C++/DLL external feature ** value is an IL static external feature ==Added external support== Look at the page for [[C externals|C]] and [[C++ Externals|C++]] with the introduction of `struct' and C++ external features encapsulation.