Mashup of Meta-Languages and its Implementation ...
Document type :
Compte-rendu et recension critique d'ouvrage
Title :
Mashup of Meta-Languages and its Implementation in the Kermeta Language Workbench
Author(s) :
Jézéquel, Jean-Marc [Auteur]
Diversity-centric Software Engineering [DiverSe]
Combemale, Benoit [Auteur]
Diversity-centric Software Engineering [DiverSe]
Barais, Olivier [Auteur]
Diversity-centric Software Engineering [DiverSe]
Monperrus, Martin [Auteur]
Self-adaptation for distributed services and large software systems [SPIRALS]
Fouquet, François [Auteur]
University of Luxembourg [Luxembourg]
Diversity-centric Software Engineering [DiverSe]
Combemale, Benoit [Auteur]
Diversity-centric Software Engineering [DiverSe]
Barais, Olivier [Auteur]
Diversity-centric Software Engineering [DiverSe]
Monperrus, Martin [Auteur]
Self-adaptation for distributed services and large software systems [SPIRALS]
Fouquet, François [Auteur]
University of Luxembourg [Luxembourg]
Journal title :
Software and Systems Modeling
Pages :
905-920
Publisher :
Springer Verlag
Publication date :
2015
ISSN :
1619-1366
HAL domain(s) :
Informatique [cs]/Génie logiciel [cs.SE]
English abstract : [en]
With the growing use of domain-specific languages (DSL) in industry, DSL design and implementation goes far beyond an activity for a few experts only and becomes a challenging task for thousands of software engineers. DSL ...
Show more >With the growing use of domain-specific languages (DSL) in industry, DSL design and implementation goes far beyond an activity for a few experts only and becomes a challenging task for thousands of software engineers. DSL implementation indeed requires engineers to care for various concerns, from abstract syntax, static semantics, behavioral semantics, to extra-functional issues such as run-time performance. This paper presents an approach that uses one meta-language per language implementation concern. We show that the usage and combination of those meta-languages is simple and intuitive enough to deserve the term "mashup". We evaluate the approach by completely implementing the non trivial fUML modeling language, a semantically sound and executable subset of the Unified Modeling Language (UML).Show less >
Show more >With the growing use of domain-specific languages (DSL) in industry, DSL design and implementation goes far beyond an activity for a few experts only and becomes a challenging task for thousands of software engineers. DSL implementation indeed requires engineers to care for various concerns, from abstract syntax, static semantics, behavioral semantics, to extra-functional issues such as run-time performance. This paper presents an approach that uses one meta-language per language implementation concern. We show that the usage and combination of those meta-languages is simple and intuitive enough to deserve the term "mashup". We evaluate the approach by completely implementing the non trivial fUML modeling language, a semantically sound and executable subset of the Unified Modeling Language (UML).Show less >
Language :
Anglais
Popular science :
Non
ANR Project :
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