
Software Reuse: Methods, Techniques, and Tools
8th International Conference, ICSR 2004, Madrid, Spain, July 5-9, 2004, Proceedings
Springer (Publisher)
Published on 25. June 2004
Book
Paperback/Softback
XI, 339 pages
978-3-540-22335-1 (ISBN)
Description
Afterthree decadesofresearch andpractice,reuse ofexistingsoftwareartefactsremains the most promising approach to decreasing effort for software development and evo- tion, increasing quality of software artefacts and decreasing time to market of software products. Over time, we have seen impressive improvements, in extra-organizational reuse,e.g.COTS,aswellasinintra-organizationalreuse,e.g.softwareproductfamilies. Despite the successes that we, as a community, have achieved, several challenges remain to be addressed. The theme for this eighth meeting of the premier international conference on software reuse is the management of software variability for reusable software.Allreusablesoftwareoperatesinmultiplecontextsandhastoaccommodatethe differencesbetweenthesecontextsthroughvariation.Inmodernsoftware,thenumberof variation points may range in the thousands with an even larger number of dependencies between these points. Topics addressing the theme include the representation, design, assessment and evolution of software variability. The proceedings that you are holding as you read this report on the current state-- the-art in software reuse.Topics covered in the proceedings include software variability, testing of reusable software artefacts, feature modeling, aspect-oriented software de- lopment, composition of components and services, model-based approaches and several other aspects of software reuse.
May 2004 Jan Bosch Charles Krueger Organizing Committee General Chair Kyo C. Kang, Pohang University of Science and Technology, Korea Program Co-chairs Jan Bosch, University of Groningen, The Netherlands Charles Krueger, BigLever Software, Inc., U.S.A.
May 2004 Jan Bosch Charles Krueger Organizing Committee General Chair Kyo C. Kang, Pohang University of Science and Technology, Korea Program Co-chairs Jan Bosch, University of Groningen, The Netherlands Charles Krueger, BigLever Software, Inc., U.S.A.
More details
Series
Edition
2004 ed.
Language
English
Place of publication
Berlin
Germany
Publishing group
Springer Berlin
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Research
Illustrations
XI, 339 p.
Dimensions
Height: 235 mm
Width: 155 mm
Thickness: 20 mm
Weight
540 gr
ISBN-13
978-3-540-22335-1 (9783540223351)
DOI
10.1007/b98465
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Jan Bosch | Charles Krueger
Software Reuse: Methods, Techniques, and Tools
8th International Conference, ICSR 2004, Madrid, Spain, July 5-9, 2004, Proceedings
E-Book
06/2004
Springer
€53.49
Available for download
Content
Software Variability: Requirements.- Supporting Software Variability by Reusing Generic Incomplete Models at the Requirements Specification Stage.- Business Users and Program Variability: Bridging the Gap.- An Approach to Develop Requirement as a Core Asset in Product Line.- Testing Reusable Software.- Towards Generating Acceptance Tests for Product Lines.- TTCN-3 Language Characteristics in Producing Reusable Test Software.- Software Reuse and the Test Development Process: A Combined Approach.- Feature Modelling.- Feature Dependency Analysis for Product Line Component Design.- Enhancements - Enabling Flexible Feature and Implementation Selection.- XML-Based Feature Modelling.- Aspect-Oriented Software Development.- Aspects for Synthesizing Applications by Refinement.- Framed Aspects: Supporting Variability and Configurability for AOP.- An Evaluation of Aspect-Oriented Programming as a Product Line Implementation Technology.- Component and Service Composition.- Variability and Component Composition.- Concern-Based Composition and Reuse of Distributed Systems.- Reusable Web Services.- Code Level Reuse.- Quantifying COTS Component Functional Adaptation.- Reuse Variables: Reusing Code and State in Timor.- Decoupling Source Trees into Build-Level Components.- Libraries, Classification, and Retrieval.- Attribute Ranking: An Entropy-Based Approach to Accelerating Browsing-Based Component Retrieval.- Software Reuse as Ontology Negotiation.- Component-Extraction-Based Search System for Object-Oriented Programs.- Model-Based Approaches.- A Metamodel-Based Approach for the Dynamic Reconfiguration of Component-Based Software.- A Multiple-View Meta-modeling Approach for Variability Management in Software Product Lines.- Validating Quality of Service for Reusable Software ViaModel-Integrated Distributed Continuous Quality Assurance.- Transformation and Generation.- Implementing Tag-Driven Transformers with Tango.- Developing Active Help for Framework Instantiation Through Case-Based Reasoning.- Requirements.- Requirements-Reuse Using GOPCSD: Component-Based Development of Process Control Systems.- Reuse, Standardization, and Transformation of Requirements.