This issue puzzled me too for a while. But gradually I'm starting to
understand it (I hope).
Since the transition of Oberon/F to BlackBox/Component Pascal the use of
super calls is strongly discouraged (and may no longer be supported in
future versions ). The reason being that it has become clear that their use
might lead to the so called semantic fragile base class problem (a subclass
might become invalid if using implementation inheritance (super calls) and
the implementation of the superclass is changed).
This is why the procedures Externalize and Internalize in module Stores
should be regarded as EMPTY (actually they are EXTENSIBLE for compatibility
reasons) They should not be called but only extended (implemented) by
inheriting object types (which only inherit their interface).
Some information on this is in the following BlackBox documents (see the
Help index):
Differences to release 1.2
Component Pascal Language Report
What's new?
Programming conventions
DevCPConv-docu
More extensive information on the rationale for this change is in the book
by Clemens Szyperski (1998): Component Software - Beyond OOP.
Hans Klaver
P.S.:
One of the difficulties I had at first was in understanding the difference
between super call and up-calls. A super call is a call to a super class
(base class, lower down in the module hierarchy), an up-call is a call to a
sub class (higher up in the module hierarchy). So: up-call = "sub call" (#
super call).
A framework like BlackBox heavily relies upon up-calls but tries to avoid
super calls!