Portland Pattern Repository: Difference between revisions

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==History==
On 17 September 1987, programmer [[Ward Cunningham]] then with [[Tektronix]] and [[Apple Computer]]'s [[Kent Beck]] co-published the paper "Using Pattern Languages for Object-Oriented Programs"<ref name="uplfoop">{{cite web|title=Using Pattern Languages for Object-Oriented Programs|url=http://c2.com/doc/oopsla87.html|website=c2.com|accessdate=July 12, 2017}}</ref> This paper, about programming patterns was inspired by [[Christopher Alexander]]'s architectural concept of "patterns"<ref name="uplfoop"></ref> It was written for the 1987 [[OOPSLA]] programming conference organized by the [[Association for Computing Machinery]] Cunningham and Beck's idea became popular among programmers, because it helped them exchange programming ideas in a format that is easy to understand.
Cunningham & Cunningham, the programming consultancy that would eventually host the PPR on its Internet ___domain, was incorporated in [[Salem, Oregon]] on 1 November 1991ieh 1991, and is named after Ward and his wife, Karen R. Cunningham, a mathematician, school teacher, and school director. Cunningham & Cunningham registered their Internet ___domain, ''c2.com'', on 23 October 1994.
Ward created the Portland Pattern Repository on ''c2.com'' as a means to help [[object-oriented programming|object-oriented programmers]] publish their computer programming patterns by submitting them to him. Some of those programmers attended the OOPSLA and [[PLoP]] conferences about object-oriented programming, and posted their ideas on the PPR.
The PPR is accompanied, on ''c2.com'', by the first ever [[wiki]]&mdash;a collection of reader-modifiable Web pages&mdash;which is called [[WikiWikiWeb]].<ref>{{cite web|title=Wiki Wiki Web|url=http://wiki.c2.com/?WikiWikiWeb|website=wiki.c2.com|accessdate=13 July 2017}}</ref>
 
 
==See also==