You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the 9th International Conference on Object-Oriented Information Systems, OOIS 2003, held in Geneva, Switzerland in September 2003. The 29 revised full papers and 11 revised short papers presented together with an invited paper and abstracts of 2 invited talks were carefully reviewed and selected from 80 submissions. The papers are organized in topical sections on evolution of OOIS, OOIS frameworks, patterns and components, object-oriented databases, XML on Web aspects, evolution, object-oriented design and architecture, and modeling of information systems.
This book constitutes the proceedings of the 48th International Conference on Objects, Models, Components, Patterns, held in Málaga, Spain, in June/July 2010.
This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the 8th International Conference on Model Driven Engineering Languages and Systems (formerly the UML series of conferences), MoDELS 2005, held in Montego Bay, Jamaica, in October 2005. The 52 revised full papers and 2 keynote abstracts presented were carefully reviewed and selected from an initial submission of 215 abstracts and 166 papers. The papers are organized in topical sections on process modelling, product families and reuse, state/behavioral modeling, aspects, design strategies, model transformations, model refactoring, quality control, MDA automation, UML 2.0, industrial experience, crosscutting concerns, modeling strategies, as well as a recapitulatory section on workshops, tutorials and panels.
This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the 34th International Colloquium on Automata, Languages and Programming, ICALP 2007, held in Wroclaw, Poland in July 2007. The 76 revised full papers presented together with 4 invited lectures were carefully reviewed and selected from 242 submissions. The papers are grouped in three major tracks on algorithms, automata, complexity and games, on logic, semantics, and theory of programming, and on security and cryptography foundations.
This book constitutes the thoroughly refereed post-proceedings of the 10th International Workshop on Early Aspects: Current Challenges and Future Directions, held in March 2007 in Vancouver, Canada, co-located with AOSD 2007, the 6th International Conference on Aspect-Oriented Software Development. The papers are organized in topical sections on aspect-oriented requirements, aspect requirements to design, aspect-oriented architecture design, and aspect-oriented domain engineering.
The 19th Annual Meeting of the European Conference on Object-Oriented Programming—ECOOP 2005—took place during the last week of July in Glasgow, Scotland, UK. This volume includes the refereed technical papers p- sented at the conference, and two invited papers. It is traditional to preface a volume of proceedings such as this with a note that emphasizes the importance of the conference in its respective ?eld. Although such self-evaluations should always be taken with a large grain of salt, ECOOP is undisputedly the pre- inent conference on object-orientation outside of the United States. In its turn, object-orientationis today’s principaltechnology not only for programming,but also fo...
Software is the essential enabler for the new economy and science. It creates new markets and new directions for a more reliable, flexible, and robust society. It empowers the exploration of our world in ever more depth. However, software often falls short behind our expectations. Current software methodologies, tools and techniques remain expensive and not yet reliable for a highly changeable and evolutionary market. Many approaches have been proven only as case-by-case oriented methods. This book presents a number of new trends and theories in the direction in which we believe software science and engineering may develop to transform the role of software and science in tomorrow's information society. This publication is an attempt to capture the essence of a new state-of-art in software science and its supporting technology. It also aims at identifying the challenges such a technology has to master.
This book will present the Nuts and bolts (Design patterns) needed to create a solution that can blow the socks of any customer. In the book we will focus on: 1. Project Management - Bringing together the components needed to enable a team that can deliver satisfaction to the customer. 2. Feature Management - How to track feature requirements, so we can, with (relative) certainty, deliver a product that supplies the needs of our customers. 3. Feature development - How to take defined requirements and turn them into features that serve the needs of our customer
It is a pleasure to present the proceedings of the 22nd European Conference on Object-Oriented Programming (ECOOP 2008) held in Paphos, Cyprus. The conference continues to serve a broad object-oriented community with a tech- cal program spanning theory and practice and a healthy mix of industrial and academic participants. This year a strong workshop and tutorial program c- plementedthemaintechnicaltrack.Wehad13workshopsand8tutorials,aswell as the co-located Dynamic Language Symposium (DLS). Finally, the program was rounded out with a keynote by Rachid Guerraoui and a banquet speech by James Noble. As in previous years, two Dahl-Nygaard awards were selected by AITO, and for the ?rst time, th...
Modern software development faces the problem of fragmentation of information across heterogeneous artefacts in different modelling and programming languages. In this dissertation, the Vitruvius approach for view-based engineering is presented. Flexible views offer a compact definition of user-specific views on software systems, and can be defined the novel ModelJoin language. The process is supported by a change metamodel for metamodel evolution and change impact analysis.