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Modeling user interfaces with Cal and Ptolemy
Hallvard Traetteberg

Citation
Hallvard Traetteberg. "Modeling user interfaces with Cal and Ptolemy". Talk or presentation, 7, November, 2013; Presented at the 10th Biennial Ptolemy Miniconference, Berkeley.

Abstract
The Cal language is a textual language for modelling actor-based systems, with support for composing actor networks and specifying atomic actor behavior by means of input-output mapping rules. An implementation will typically translate high-level Cal programs to a low-level language and specific platform. The talk will present a Cal implementation that uses Java and the Ptolemy framework as the host language and platform, and how it can be used for modelling user interfaces.

Electronic downloads

Citation formats  
  • HTML
    Hallvard Traetteberg. <a
    href="http://chess.eecs.berkeley.edu/pubs/1031.html"><i>Modeling
    user interfaces with Cal and Ptolemy</i></a>,
    Talk or presentation,  7, November, 2013; Presented at the
    <a href="http://ptolemy.org/conferences/13"
    >10th Biennial Ptolemy Miniconference</a>, Berkeley.
  • Plain text
    Hallvard Traetteberg. "Modeling user interfaces with
    Cal and Ptolemy". Talk or presentation,  7, November,
    2013; Presented at the <a
    href="http://ptolemy.org/conferences/13" >10th
    Biennial Ptolemy Miniconference</a>, Berkeley.
  • BibTeX
    @presentation{Traetteberg13_ModelingUserInterfacesWithCalPtolemy,
        author = {Hallvard Traetteberg},
        title = {Modeling user interfaces with Cal and Ptolemy},
        day = {7},
        month = {November},
        year = {2013},
        note = {Presented at the <a
                  href="http://ptolemy.org/conferences/13" >10th
                  Biennial Ptolemy Miniconference</a>, Berkeley.},
        abstract = {The Cal language is a textual language for
                  modelling actor-based systems, with support for
                  composing actor networks and specifying atomic
                  actor behavior by means of input-output mapping
                  rules. An implementation will typically translate
                  high-level Cal programs to a low-level language
                  and specific platform. The talk will present a Cal
                  implementation that uses Java and the Ptolemy
                  framework as the host language and platform, and
                  how it can be used for modelling user interfaces. },
        URL = {http://chess.eecs.berkeley.edu/pubs/1031.html}
    }
    

Posted by Barb Hoversten on 16 Nov 2013.
Groups: chess
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