Title
Specification of domain-specific languages based on concern interfaces
Abstract
Concern-Driven Development (CDD) is a set of software engineering approaches that focus on reusing existing software models. In CDD, a concern encapsulates related software models and provides three interfaces to facilitate reuse. These interfaces allow to select, customize, and use elements of the concern when an application reuses the concern. Domain-Specific Languages (DSLs) emerged to make modeling accessible to users and domain experts who are not familiar with software engineering techniques. In this paper, we argue that it is possible to create a DSL by using only the three-part interface of the concern modeling the domain in question and that the three-part interface is essential for an appropriate DSL. The DSL enables the composition of the concern with the application under development. We explain this by specifying DSLs based on the interfaces of the Association and the Observer concerns.
Year
DOI
Venue
2014
10.1145/2588548.2588551
FOAL
Keywords
Field
DocType
appropriate dsl,observer concern,three-part interface,concern interface,domain-specific languages,software engineering technique,software engineering approach,existing software model,concern-driven development,domain expert,domain-specific language,software model,dsl,domain specific languages,reuse,ram,cdd
Domain-specific language,Programming language,Reuse,Digital subscriber line,Computer science,Software,Observer (quantum physics)
Conference
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
0
0.34
4
Authors
4
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Matthias Schöttle1798.86
Omar Alam28815.05
Gunter Mussbacher370860.88
Jörg Kienzle473269.38