Many approaches have been proposed to enhance software productivity and reliability. These approaches typically fall into three categories: the engineering approach, the formal approach, and the knowledge-based approach. The optimal gain in software productivity cannot be obtained if one relies on o
Domain Modeling-Based Software Engineering: A Formal Approach
β Scribed by Ruqian Lu, Zhi Jin (auth.)
- Publisher
- Springer US
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 352
- Series
- The Springer International Series on Asian Studies in Computer and Information Science 8
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Many approaches have been proposed to enhance software productivity and reliability. These approaches typically fall into three categories: the engineering approach, the formal approach, and the knowledge-based approach. The optimal gain in software productivity cannot be obtained if one relies on only one of these approaches. Thus, the integration of different approaches has also become a major area of research.
No approach can be said to be perfect if it fails to satisfy the following two criteria. Firstly, a good approach should support the full life cycle of software development. Secondly, a good approach should support the development of large-scale software for real use in many application domains. Such an approach can be referred to as a five-in-one approach.
The authors of this book have, for the past eight years, conducted research in knowledge-based software engineering, of which the final goal is to develop a paradigm for software engineering which not only integrates the three approaches mentioned above, but also fulfils the two criteria on which the five-in-one approach is based. DomainModeling- Based Software Engineering: A Formal Approach explores the results of this research.
Domain Modeling-Based Software Engineering: A Formal Approach will be useful to researchers of knowledge-based software engineering, students and instructors of computer science, and software engineers who are working on large-scale projects of software development and want to use knowledge-based development methods in their work.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-xix
Front Matter....Pages 1-1
Challenge of the Era....Pages 3-22
Front Matter....Pages 23-23
Ontology-Oriented Domain Analysis: The Foundation....Pages 25-71
Ontology-Oriented Domain Analysis: The Dynamics....Pages 73-119
Front Matter....Pages 121-121
Automating the Requirement Analysis....Pages 123-166
OORA: Ontology Oriented Requirement Analysis....Pages 167-199
Planning Software Architecture....Pages 201-225
Front Matter....Pages 227-227
Intelligent Information Service....Pages 229-268
Software Reuse and System Evolution....Pages 269-307
Front Matter....Pages 309-309
Summary and Assessment....Pages 311-333
Back Matter....Pages 335-347
β¦ Subjects
Software Engineering/Programming and Operating Systems; Computer Science, general; Computing Methodologies
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