1.

Record Nr.

UNISA996465778103316

Titolo

UML 2003 -- The Unified Modeling Language, Modeling Languages and Applications [[electronic resource] ] : 6th International Conference San Francisco, CA, USA, October 20-24, 2003, Proceedings / / edited by Perdita Stevens, Jon Whittle, Grady Booch

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Berlin, Heidelberg : , : Springer Berlin Heidelberg : , : Imprint : Springer, , 2003

ISBN

3-540-45221-4

Edizione

[1st ed. 2003.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (XIV, 418 p.)

Collana

Lecture Notes in Computer Science, , 0302-9743 ; ; 2863

Disciplina

005.1/17

Soggetti

Computer programming

Software engineering

Programming languages (Electronic computers)

Computer simulation

Management information systems

Computer science

Programming Techniques

Software Engineering

Programming Languages, Compilers, Interpreters

Simulation and Modeling

Management of Computing and Information Systems

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Nota di contenuto

Invited Talk 1 -- Agile Processes: Developing Your Own “Secret Recipes” -- Practical Model Management -- Difference and Union of Models -- GREAT: UML Transformation Tool for Porting Middleware Applications -- Model-Centric Engineering with the Evolution and Validation Environment -- Time and Quality of Service -- Representing Temporal Information in UML -- Formal Semantics of UML with Real-Time Constructs -- A QoS-Oriented Extension of UML Statecharts -- Short Tool Papers -- CheckVML: A Tool for Model Checking Visual Modeling Languages -- A Workbench to Experiment on New Model Engineering Applications -- ProGUM-Web: Tool Support for Model-



Based Development of Web Applications -- Composition and Architecture -- On the Key Role of Composition in Object-Oriented Modelling -- Compositional and Relational Reasoning During Class Abstraction -- Encoding Informal Architectural Descriptions with UML: An Experience Report -- Invited Talk 2 -- UML/MDA Reality Check: Heterogenous Architecture Style -- Transformation -- Towards Automating Source-Consistent UML Refactorings -- Model Refactorings as Rule-Based Update Transformations -- Reflective Model Driven Engineering -- The Web -- A Model-Driven Runtime Environment for Web Applications -- Using UML and XMI for Generating Adaptive Navigation Sequences in Web-Based Systems -- Platform Independent Web Application Modeling -- Testing and Validation -- Rigorous Testing by Merging Structural and Behavioral UML Representations -- Towards Automated Support for Deriving Test Data from UML Statecharts -- Validation of UML and OCL Models by Automatic Snapshot Generation -- Improving UML/OCL -- A Critique of UML’s Definition of the Use-Case Class -- Modelling Database Views with Derived Classes in the UML/OCL-framework -- An OCL Extension for Low-Coupling Preserving Contracts -- Invited Talk 3 -- What Is the Point of the UML? -- Consistency -- Using Description Logic to Maintain Consistency between UML Models -- Modeling and Testing Legacy Data Consistency Requirements -- The Consistency Workbench: A Tool for Consistency Management in UML-Based Development -- Methodology -- Developing Safety-Critical Systems with UML -- Consistent and Complete Access Control Policies in Use Cases -- STAIRS – Steps To Analyze Interactions with Refinement Semantics -- Workshops and Tutorials -- Workshops at the UML 2003 Conference -- Tutorials at the UML 2003 Conference.

Sommario/riassunto

The past year has been an eventful one for those interested in software modeling. The first major revision of the Unified Modeling Language, UML2.0, is in the process of adoption by the Object Management Group (OMG), and it makes many long-desired additions and improvements to UML. At the same time, it expands what was already a large language. A challenge for both practitioners and researchers is to help smooth the adoption of this new language. Increasingly, attention is being paid to the use of specialized languages, often profiles of UML, appropriate for different purposes; this is one way to make UML less overwhelming. Accordingly, the focus of the UML conference is gradually expanding from UML to software modeling in general. Simultaneously, model-driven development is being pursued as a way of increasing the benefits from modeling throughout the software development process. Gradually, it is developing from a set of slogans into a reality. Many of the papers in this volume are concerned, directly or indirectly, with how to make modeling, rather than coding, the heart of software development, and how to realize the resulting benefits of higher-level thinking. Much work remains to be done.