Ebook: Radical Innovations of Software and Systems Engineering in the Future: 9th International Workshop, RISSEF 2002, Venice, Italy, October 7-11, 2002. Revised Papers
Author: Egidio Astesiano Maura Cerioli (auth.) Martin Wirsing Alexander Knapp Simonetta Balsamo (eds.)
- Tags: Software Engineering, Programming Languages Compilers Interpreters, Logics and Meanings of Programs
- Series: Lecture Notes in Computer Science 2941
- Year: 2004
- Publisher: Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
- Edition: 1
- Language: English
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This volume contains the papers from the workshop “Radical Innovations of Software and Systems Engineering in the Future.” This workshop was the ninth in the series of Monterey Software Engineering workshops for formulating and advancing software engineering models and techniques, with the fundamental theme of increasing the practical impact of formal methods. During the last decade object orientation was the driving factor for new system solutions in many areas ranging from e-commerce to embedded systems. New modeling languages such as UML and new programming languages such as Java and CASE tools have considerably in?uenced the system development techniques of today and will remain key techniques for the near future. However, actual practice shows many de?ciencies of these new approaches: – there is no proof and no evidence that software productivity has increased with the new methods; – UML has no clean scienti?c foundations, which inhibits the construction of powerful analysis and development tools; – support for mobile distributed system development is missing; – formanyapplications,object-orienteddesignisnotsuitedtoproducingclean well-structured code, as many applications show.
This book constitutes the thoroughly refereed post-proceedings of the 9th International Workshop on Radical Innovations of Software and Systems Engineering in the Future, RISSEF 2002, held in Venice, Italy, in October 2002.
The 24 revised full papers presented were carefully reviewed and selected from the 36 invited workshop presentations. The authors evaluate all major paradigms and conceptual issues in software and systems design and analysis, especially regarding their potential for modifications to cope with future needs.