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Design of object-oriented simulations in C++
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Source Winter Simulation Conference archive
Proceedings of the 27th conference on Winter simulation table of contents
Arlington, Virginia, United States
Pages: 82 - 89  
Year of Publication: 1995
ISBN:0-7803-3018-8
Authors
Jeffrey A. Joines  Department of Industrial Engineering, Campus Box 7906, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC
Stephen D. Roberts  Department of Industrial Engineering, Campus Box 7906, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC
Sponsors
IIE : Institute of Industrial Engineers
SCS : Society for Computer Simulation
ASA : American Statistical Association
NIST : National Institue of Standards & Technology
IEEE-CS : Computer Society
IEEE-SMCS : Systems, Man & Cybernetics Society
ACM: Association for Computing Machinery
INFORMS/CS : Computer Science TC
SIGSIM: ACM Special Interest Group on Simulation and Modeling
Publisher
IEEE Computer Society  Washington, DC, USA
Bibliometrics
Downloads (6 Weeks): 8,   Downloads (12 Months): 21,   Citation Count: 5
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ABSTRACT

A set of object classes have been written in C++ which can be used to create simulation models and simulation packages. The simulations built with these classes possess the benefits of an object-oriented design, including the use of inheritance, encapsulation, polymorphism, run-time binding, and parameterized typing. These concepts are illustrated by creating a network queuing simulation language which has several notable features not available in other similar languages. Object-oriented simulations provide full accessibility to the base language, faster executions, portable models and executables, a multi-vendor implementation language, and a growing variety of complementary development tools.


REFERENCES

Note: OCR errors may be found in this Reference List extracted from the full text article. ACM has opted to expose the complete List rather than only correct and linked references.

 
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Belanger, R., and A. Mullarney. 1990. Modsim H tutorial CACI Products Company, La Jolla, CA.
 
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Borland. 1993. Borland C++ version 4.0. Borland International, Inc. 100 Borland Way, Scotts Valley, CA 95066-3249.
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Roberts, S. D. 1983. Modeling and simulation with IN- SIGHT. Indianapolis, Indiana: Regenstrief Institute.
 
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Collaborative Colleagues:
Jeffrey A. Joines: colleagues
Stephen D. Roberts: colleagues