default search action
20th OOPSLA 2005: San Diego, CA, USA - Companion
- Ralph E. Johnson, Richard P. Gabriel:
Companion to the 20th Annual ACM SIGPLAN Conference on Object-Oriented Programming, Systems, Languages, and Applications, OOPSLA 2005, October 16-20, 2005, San Diego, CA, USA. ACM 2005, ISBN 1-59593-193-7 - Robert Hass:
Creativity. 2 - Mary Beth Rosson:
The end of users. 3 - Martin Fowler:
Finding good design. 4 - Jimmy Wales:
Wikipedia in the free culture revolution. 5 - Gerald J. Sussman:
Why programming is a good medium for expressing poorly understood and sloppily formulated ideas. 6 - David P. Reed:
Designing croquet's TeaTime: a real-time, temporal environment for active object cooperation. 7 - Grady Booch:
On creating a handbook of software architecture. 8
Onward!
- David M. Ungar, Adam Spitz, Alex Ausch:
Constructing a metacircular Virtual machine in an exploratory programming environment. 11-20 - Martin C. Rinard, Cristian Cadar, Huu Hai Nguyen:
Exploring the acceptability envelope. 21-30 - Jessie Dedecker, Tom Van Cutsem, Stijn Mostinckx, Theo D'Hondt, Wolfgang De Meuter:
Ambient-oriented programming. 31-40 - Oliver Imbusch, Falk Langhammer, Guido von Walter:
Ercatons and organic programming: say good-bye to planned economy. 41-52 - Russell Holt:
Living structure and the software garden. 53-54 - Ramesh K. Karne, Karthick V. Jaganathan, Nelson Rosa Jr., Tufail Ahmed:
DOSC: dispersed operating system computing. 55-62 - Roly Perera, Jeff Foster, György Koch:
A delta-driven execution model for semantic computing. 63-71 - Dean Mackie, Gifford Louie, Jason Rogers, Niall Shaw:
Agile environments...: for the rest of us. 72 - Christian Einfeldt, Adam Doxtater, Dorothee Weiler, Doris Waizmann, Paul Donahue, Holden Aust, Alexandro Colorado, Lars Noodén, Linda Worthington, Ursula Schmidt, Diane Mackay, Danese Cooper, Dominik Hierl, Ben Horst, Sky Christopherson, Justin Flint, Josh Berkus, Cooper Stevenson, Kass Stevenson, Rufus Laggren:
The digital tipping point. 73 - Morten Telling Nielsen, Niels Bhors Alle:
Parental inheritance. 74 - Rebeca Roe Dunn-Krahn, Jessica Maple, Yvonne Coady:
The crisis in systems code maintenance: sourceforge, we have a problem. 75 - James Coplien, Brian Foote, Richard P. Gabriel, Dave A. Thomas, Cristina Videira Lopes, Brian Marick, Bonnie A. Nardi, Rob Tow, Andrew Hunt, Glenn Vanderburg:
Breakthrough ideas. 76-86
Posters
- Chris Allan, Pavel Avgustinov, Aske Simon Christensen, Bruno Dufour, Christopher Goard, Laurie J. Hendren, Sascha Kuzins, Jennifer Lhoták, Ondrej Lhoták, Oege de Moor, Damien Sereni, Ganesh Sittampalam, Julian Tibble, Clark Verbrugge:
abc the aspectBench compiler for aspectJ a workbench for aspect-oriented programming language and compilers research. 88-89 - Dean Mackie, Gifford Louie, Jason Rogers, Niall Shaw:
Agile environments...: for the rest of us. 90-91 - Stijn Mostinckx, Tom Van Cutsem, Jessie Dedecker, Wolfgang De Meuter, Theo D'Hondt:
Ambient-oriented programming in ambientTalk. 92-93 - Marcílio Mendonça, Paulo S. C. Alencar, Toacy Cavalcante de Oliveira, Donald D. Cowan:
Assisting aspect-oriented framework instantiation: towards modeling, transformation and tool support. 94-95 - Roly Perera, Russ Freeman:
Beyond the language workbench: a runtime platform for practical semantic computing. 96-97 - Vikram Jamwal, Sridhar Iyer:
BoBs: breakable objects. 98-99 - Emerson R. Murphy-Hill, Chuan-Kai Lin, Andrew P. Black, Jonathan Walpole:
Can infopipes facilitate reuse in a traffic application? 100-101 - Elnar Hajiyev, Mathieu Verbaere, Oege de Moor, Kris De Volder:
CodeQuest: querying source code with datalog. 102-103 - Yuehua Lin, Jeff Gray:
A comprehensive model transformation approach to automated model construction and evolution. 104-105 - Haitham S. Hamza:
Developing business object models with patterns and ontologies. 106-107 - Carl Alphonce, Blake Martin:
Green: a customizable UML class diagram plug-in for eclipse. 108-109 - Sofie Goderis, Theo D'Hondt:
High-level declarative user interfaces. 110-111 - Michael Gorbovitski, Tom Rothamel, Yanhong A. Liu, Scott D. Stoller:
Implementing incrementalization across object abstraction. 112-113 - Roberta Coelho, Uirá Kulesza, Arndt von Staa:
Improving architecture testability with patterns. 114-115 - Vineet Sinha, Rob Miller, David R. Karger:
Incremental exploratory visualization of relationships in large codebases for program comprehension. 116-117 - Marko van Dooren, Eric Steegmans:
Language constructs for improving reusability in object-oriented software. 118-119 - Wade Holst:
Meta: a universal meta-language for augmenting and unifying language families, featuring meta(oopl) for object-oriented programming languages. 120-121 - Federico Balaguer:
Model checking the behavior of frameworks extended with other frameworks. 122-123 - Tiago Massoni, Rohit Gheyi, Paulo Borba:
A model-driven approach to formal refactoring. 124-125 - Krzysztof Czarnecki, Michal Antkiewicz, Chang Hwan Peter Kim, Sean Lau, Krzysztof Pietroszek:
Model-driven software product lines. 126-127 - Hiroshi Wada, Junichi Suzuki, Katsuya Oba:
Modeling turnpike: a model-driven framework for domain-specific software development. 128-129 - Roberta Coelho, Esther Brasileiro, Arndt von Staa:
Not so eXtreme programming: agile practices for R&D projects. 130-131 - Haitham S. Hamza, Yi Chen:
PAD: a pattern-driven analysis and design method. 132-133 - Paulo Merson, Scott A. Hissam:
Predictability by construction. 134-135 - Uirá Kulesza, Cláudio Sant'Anna, Carlos José Pereira de Lucena:
Refactoring the JUnit framework using aspect-oriented programming. 136-137 - Aleksander B. Demko, Rodrigo A. Vivanco, Nicolino J. Pizzi:
Scopira: an open source C++ framework for biomedical data analysis applications -- a research project report. 138-139 - Seunghak Lee, Iryoung Jeong:
SDD: high performance code clone detection system for large scale source code. 140-141 - Munawar Hafiz:
Security patterns and evolution of MTA architecture. 142-143 - Mauro Marinilli:
Self-designing software. 144-145 - Ellen Van Paesschen, Wolfgang De Meuter, Maja D'Hondt:
SelfSync: a dynamic round-trip engineering environment. 146-147 - Dragos-Anton Manolescu, Boris Lublinsky:
Service orchestration patterns: graduating from state of the practice to state of the art. 148-149 - Doug Simon, Cristina Cifuentes:
The squawk virtual machine: Java on the bare metal. 150-151 - Gan Deng:
Supporting configuration and deployment of component-based DRE systems using frameworks, models, and aspects. 152-153 - Ben Stephenson, Wade Holst:
A technique for utilizing optimization potential during multicode identification. 154-155 - Hani Z. Girgis, Bharat Jayaraman, Paul V. Gestwicki:
Visualizing errors in object oriented programs. 156-157 - Koichi Sasada:
YARV: yet another RubyVM: innovating the ruby interpreter. 158-159
OOPSLA demonstrations
- Larry L. Constantine, Pedro F. Campos:
CanonSketch and TaskSketch: innovative modeling tools for usage-centered design. 162-163 - Neeraj Sangal, Ev Jordan, Vineet Sinha, Daniel Jackson:
Using dependency models to manage software architecture. 164-165 - Steve Dekorte:
Io: a small programming language. 166-167 - Carl Alphonce, Blake Martin:
Green: a customizable UML class diagram plug-in for eclipse. 168-169 - Adam Kiezun, Robert M. Fuhrer, Frank Tip, Markus Keller:
Generics-related refactorings in eclipse. 170 - Liming Zhu, Yan Liu, Ian Gorton, Ngoc Bao Bui:
MDAbench: a tool for customized benchmark generation using MDA. 171-172 - Hui Wu, Jeff Gray:
Testing domain-specific languages in eclipse. 173-174 - Rajesh Bordawekar, Michael G. Burke, Igor Peshansky, Mukund Raghavachari:
XJ: robust XML processing in Java. 175 - Peter Weißgerber, Stephan Diehl, Carsten Görg:
An interactive visualization of refactorings retrieved from software archives. 176-177 - Somsak Phattarasukol, Daisy F. Sang:
PatternStudio: a tool for design pattern management. 178-179 - Héctor G. Pérez-González, Jugal K. Kalita, Alberto Salvador Núñez Varela, Richard S. Wiener:
GOOAL: an educational object oriented analysis laboratory. 180-181 - Christian Schwarz, Stein Kåre Skytteren, Trond Marius Øvstetun:
AutAT: an eclipse plugin for automatic acceptance testing of web applications. 182-183 - Martin Burger, Karsten Lehmann, Andreas Zeller:
Automated debugging in eclipse. 184-185 - Thomas Zimmermann, Valentin Dallmeier, Konstantin Halachev, Andreas Zeller:
eROSE: guiding programmers in eclipse. 186-187 - Scott E. Spetka, George O. Ramseyer, Richard W. Linderman:
Using globus grid objects to extend a corba-based object-oriented system. 188-189 - Ellen Van Paesschen, Wolfgang De Meuter, Maja D'Hondt:
SelfSync: a dynamic round-trip engineering environment. 190-191 - Salleh Diab, Yeh Diab:
TableCode: defining, extending and deploying object-oriented programs directly from databases. 192-193 - Alexander Brodsky, Hadon Nash:
CoJava: a unified language for simulation and optimization. 194-195 - Jessie Dedecker:
Ambient-oriented programming in AmbientTalk: combining mobile hardware with simplicity and expressiveness. 196-197 - Vineet Sinha, Rob Miller, David R. Karger:
Incremental exploratory visualization of relationships in large codebases for program comprehension. 198-199 - Krzysztof Czarnecki, Michal Antkiewicz, Chang Hwan Peter Kim, Sean Lau, Krzysztof Pietroszek:
fmp and fmp2rsm: eclipse plug-ins for modeling features using model templates. 200-201 - Roly Perera, Jeff Foster:
A delta-driven execution model for semantic computing. 202-204
Student research competition
- John Bergin:
Autonomous optimisation of application servers. 206-207 - Rohit Gheyi, Tiago Massoni:
Formal refactorings for object models. 208-209 - Hui Wu:
Grammar-driven generation of domain-specific language testing tools. 210-211 - Faizan Javed:
Inferring context-free grammars for domain-specific languages. 212-213 - Jing Zhang:
Metamodel-driven model interpreter evolution. 214-215 - Ruth G. Lennon:
Optimisation of service provision for composite web services. 216-217 - Xiaoqing Wu:
Pattern transformation for two-dimensional separation of concerns. 218-219 - Haitham S. Hamza:
A semi-automated approach for analyzing, separating, and modeling of concerns in evolving systems. 220-221 - David S. Janzen:
Software architecture improvement through test-driven development. 222-223 - Shih-Hsi Liu:
A software product line architecture for distributed real-time and embedded systems: a separation of concerns approach. 224-225 - Uri Dekel:
Towards distributed software design meetings: what can we learn from co-located meetings? 226-227 - Danny Dig:
Using refactorings to automatically update component-based applications. 228-230
Doctoral symposium
- Thomas Cottenier, Tzilla Elrad:
Adaptive compositions across organizational boundaries. 232-233 - Danny Dig:
Using refactorings to automatically update component-based applications. 234-235 - Sofie Goderis:
High-level declarative user interfaces. 236-237 - Miguel Goulão:
Component-based software engineering: a quantitative approach. 238-239 - David S. Janzen:
Software architecture improvement through test-driven development. 240-241 - Faizan Javed:
Inferring context-free grammars for domain-specific languages. 242-243 - Carl S. Lebsack, J. Morris Chang:
System level perspective on object locality. 244-245 - Feng Xian, Witawas Srisa-an, Hong Jiang:
Fortune teller: improving garbage collection performance in server environment using live objects prediction. 246-248
Practitioner reports
- Kristoffer Kvam, Rodin Lie, Daniel Bakkelund:
Legacy system exorcism by Pareto's principle. 250-256 - Edward R. Carroll:
Estimating software based on use case points. 257-265 - Jeff Patton:
Finding the forest in the trees. 266-274 - John Kuriakose:
"Honey, i shrunk the types": how behavioral types loose relevance on the edges on OO applications and why a core data fabric is useful for adaptability. 275-281 - Emerson R. Murphy-Hill, Philip J. Quitslund, Andrew P. Black:
Removing duplication from java.io: a case study using traits. 282-291 - Hernán Wilkinson, Maximo Prieto, Luciano Romeo:
Arithmetic with measurements on dynamically-typed object-oriented languages. 292-300 - Olaf Zimmermann, Vadim Doubrovski, Jonas Grundler, Kerard Hogg:
Service-oriented architecture and business process choreography in an order management scenario: rationale, concepts, lessons learned. 301-312 - Kurt Madsen:
Agility vs. stability at a successful start-up: steps to progress amidst chaos and change. 313-318 - Shay Artzi, Michael D. Ernst:
Using predicate fields in a highly flexible industrial control system. 319-330
Educator's symposium
- Axel Schmolitzky:
A laboratory for teaching object-oriented language and design concepts with teachlets. 332-337 - E. Frank Barry, Christopher C. Ellsworth, Barry L. Kurtz, James T. Wilkes:
Teaching OO methodology in a project-driven CS2 course. 338-343 - Robert S. Rist:
Modeling object-oriented design. 344-349 - Pauli Byckling, Petri Gerdt, Jorma Sajaniemi:
Roles of variables in object-oriented programming. 350-355 - Jürgen Börstler:
Improving CRC-card role-play with role-play diagrams. 356-364 - Grigori Melnik, Frank Maurer:
The practice of specifying requirements using executable acceptance tests in computer science courses. 365-370 - David West, Pamela M. Rostal, Richard P. Gabriel:
Apprenticeship agility in academia. 371-374
Panels
- Adrian M. Colyer, Jack Greenfield, Ivar Jacobson, Gregor Kiczales, Dave A. Thomas:
Aspects: passing fad or new foundation? 376-377 - Steven Fraser, Djenana Campara, Carl Chilley, Richard P. Gabriel, Richard Lopez, Dave A. Thomas, Greg Utas:
Fostering software robustness in an increasingly hostile world. 378-380 - Linda Rising, Mary Lynn Manns, Kevlin Henney, Angela Martin, Alan O'Callaghan, Rebecca Wirfs-Brock:
The agile panel. 381-382 - Steven Fraser, Kent L. Beck, Grady Booch, Larry L. Constantine, Brian Henderson-Sellers, Steve McConnell, Rebecca Wirfs-Brock, Edward Yourdon:
Echoes?: structured design and modern software practices. 383-386 - Steve Berzcuk, Michael C. Feathers, Steven Fraser, Dennis Mancl, Bill Opdyke:
Living with legacy: love it or leave it? 387-388
manage site settings
To protect your privacy, all features that rely on external API calls from your browser are turned off by default. You need to opt-in for them to become active. All settings here will be stored as cookies with your web browser. For more information see our F.A.Q.