6th international workshop on scenarios and state machines: Models, algorithms, and tools (SCESM07)

Scenarios and state machines are two of the fundamental modeling perspectives for developing behavioral abstractions of complex, reactive software. Scenarios represent a partial view on the interactions between multiple system components; state machines typically model the complete behavior of indiv...

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Autor principal: Kicillof, Nicolás
Publicado: 2007
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Acceso en línea:https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_02705257_v_n_p129_Grieskamp
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_02705257_v_n_p129_Grieskamp
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spelling paper:paper_02705257_v_n_p129_Grieskamp2023-06-08T15:24:39Z 6th international workshop on scenarios and state machines: Models, algorithms, and tools (SCESM07) Kicillof, Nicolás Computer aided software engineering Computer programming languages Knowledge representation Mathematical models Software reliability Unified Modeling Language Fundamental modeling Multiple system components State machines Technical presentations Scenarios and state machines are two of the fundamental modeling perspectives for developing behavioral abstractions of complex, reactive software. Scenarios represent a partial view on the interactions between multiple system components; state machines typically model the complete behavior of individual components. Both perspectives have advantages -scenarios are easily understood by stakeholders at all levels, lead naturally to tests and focus on intercomponent communication; state machines, on the other hand, provide precise descriptions of component behavior and can be used for generating implementations (either manually or automatically). In particular, UML supports both notations and in UML2.0, scenarios can be modeled in a much more expressive way than with previous versions of UML. This workshop aims to investigate the connection between scenarios and state machines, assess how this connection can be exploited to improve software development, support the evaluation of techniques that exploit the connection and support the showcasing of developer tools based on both views. © 2007 IEEE. Fil:Kicillof, N. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina. 2007 https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_02705257_v_n_p129_Grieskamp http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_02705257_v_n_p129_Grieskamp
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
topic Computer aided software engineering
Computer programming languages
Knowledge representation
Mathematical models
Software reliability
Unified Modeling Language
Fundamental modeling
Multiple system components
State machines
Technical presentations
spellingShingle Computer aided software engineering
Computer programming languages
Knowledge representation
Mathematical models
Software reliability
Unified Modeling Language
Fundamental modeling
Multiple system components
State machines
Technical presentations
Kicillof, Nicolás
6th international workshop on scenarios and state machines: Models, algorithms, and tools (SCESM07)
topic_facet Computer aided software engineering
Computer programming languages
Knowledge representation
Mathematical models
Software reliability
Unified Modeling Language
Fundamental modeling
Multiple system components
State machines
Technical presentations
description Scenarios and state machines are two of the fundamental modeling perspectives for developing behavioral abstractions of complex, reactive software. Scenarios represent a partial view on the interactions between multiple system components; state machines typically model the complete behavior of individual components. Both perspectives have advantages -scenarios are easily understood by stakeholders at all levels, lead naturally to tests and focus on intercomponent communication; state machines, on the other hand, provide precise descriptions of component behavior and can be used for generating implementations (either manually or automatically). In particular, UML supports both notations and in UML2.0, scenarios can be modeled in a much more expressive way than with previous versions of UML. This workshop aims to investigate the connection between scenarios and state machines, assess how this connection can be exploited to improve software development, support the evaluation of techniques that exploit the connection and support the showcasing of developer tools based on both views. © 2007 IEEE.
author Kicillof, Nicolás
author_facet Kicillof, Nicolás
author_sort Kicillof, Nicolás
title 6th international workshop on scenarios and state machines: Models, algorithms, and tools (SCESM07)
title_short 6th international workshop on scenarios and state machines: Models, algorithms, and tools (SCESM07)
title_full 6th international workshop on scenarios and state machines: Models, algorithms, and tools (SCESM07)
title_fullStr 6th international workshop on scenarios and state machines: Models, algorithms, and tools (SCESM07)
title_full_unstemmed 6th international workshop on scenarios and state machines: Models, algorithms, and tools (SCESM07)
title_sort 6th international workshop on scenarios and state machines: models, algorithms, and tools (scesm07)
publishDate 2007
url https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_02705257_v_n_p129_Grieskamp
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_02705257_v_n_p129_Grieskamp
work_keys_str_mv AT kicillofnicolas 6thinternationalworkshoponscenariosandstatemachinesmodelsalgorithmsandtoolsscesm07
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