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In computer science, message passing programming, as opposed to imperative programming, is a programming paradigm that describes computation in terms of communicating messages to recipients that have local state as opposed to operations that change shared memory. Prominent examples of the message passing approach are the Actor model, Object Oriented Programming, Web Services, and the Internet.

See also


Programming paradigms | Concurrent computing

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Message passing programming".

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