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5th OOPSLA Workshop on Domain-Specific Modeling (DSM'05)

Citation
"5th OOPSLA Workshop on Domain-Specific Modeling (DSM'05)". Juha-Pekka Tolvanen, Jonathan Sprinkle, Matti Rossi (eds.), Computer Science and Information System Reports, Technical Reports, TR-36, University of Jyväskylä, Finland, October, 2005.

Abstract
DomainSpecific Modeling aims at raising the level of abstraction beyond programming by specifying the solution directly using domain concepts. In a number of cases the final products can be generated from these highlevel specifications. This automation is possible because of domainspecificity: both the modeling language and code generators fit to the requirements of a narrow domain only, often in a single company. This is the fifth workshop on DomainSpecific Modeling, following the encouraging experiences from the earlier workshops at past OOPSLA conferences (Tampa 2001, Seattle 2002, Anaheim 2003 and Vancouver 2004). During the time the DSM workshops have been organized, interest in domainspecific modeling languages, metamodeling and supporting tools has seen a revival. Today DSM approaches gain popularity and they are used by large software development organizations. Furthermore, development environments for DSM have been deployed by key tool manufacturers, especially Microsoft and IBM. The objective of this workshop series is to bring together practitioners and researchers on the field of DSM to discuss and share experiences, present new ideas on modeling and tools. The workshop follows the structure found effective during the past workshops: presentations of selected papers in the morning and early afternoon and group work and its reporting in the late afternoon. This year the papers are organized into three themes: cases of DSM language creation and use, DSM for special domains and foundations of DSM. Together all these contributions form a basis for fruitful discussions on creation, use and refinement of DSM and supporting tools. The electronic version of the proceedings, presentation slides and group work results is available at www.dsmforum.org/events. We thank our program committee who donated their time and energy to review the papers. We hope you find the results of DSM’05 beneficial and enjoyable.

Electronic downloads

Citation formats  
  • HTML
     <a
    href="http://chess.eecs.berkeley.edu/pubs/71.html"
    ><i>5th OOPSLA Workshop on Domain-Specific Modeling
    (DSM'05)</i></a>, Juha-Pekka Tolvanen, Jonathan
    Sprinkle, Matti Rossi (eds.), Computer Science and
    Information System Reports, Technical Reports, TR-36,
    University of Jyväskylä, Finland, October, 2005.
  • Plain text
     "5th OOPSLA Workshop on Domain-Specific Modeling
    (DSM'05)". Juha-Pekka Tolvanen, Jonathan Sprinkle,
    Matti Rossi (eds.), Computer Science and Information System
    Reports, Technical Reports, TR-36, University of
    Jyväskylä, Finland, October, 2005.
  • BibTeX
    @proceedings{TolvanenSprinkleRossi05_5thOOPSLAWorkshopOnDomainSpecificModelingDSM05,
        title = {5th OOPSLA Workshop on Domain-Specific Modeling
                  (DSM'05)},
        editor = {Juha-Pekka Tolvanen, Jonathan Sprinkle, Matti Rossi},
        organization = {Computer Science and Information System Reports,
                  Technical Reports, TR-36, University of Jyväskylä,
                  Finland},
        month = {October},
        year = {2005},
        abstract = {DomainSpecific Modeling aims at raising the level
                  of abstraction beyond programming by specifying
                  the solution directly using domain concepts. In a
                  number of cases the final products can be
                  generated from these highlevel specifications.
                  This automation is possible because of
                  domainspecificity: both the modeling language and
                  code generators fit to the requirements of a
                  narrow domain only, often in a single company.
                  This is the fifth workshop on DomainSpecific
                  Modeling, following the encouraging experiences
                  from the earlier workshops at past OOPSLA
                  conferences (Tampa 2001, Seattle 2002, Anaheim
                  2003 and Vancouver 2004). During the time the DSM
                  workshops have been organized, interest in
                  domainspecific modeling languages, metamodeling
                  and supporting tools has seen a revival. Today DSM
                  approaches gain popularity and they are used by
                  large software development organizations.
                  Furthermore, development environments for DSM have
                  been deployed by key tool manufacturers,
                  especially Microsoft and IBM. The objective of
                  this workshop series is to bring together
                  practitioners and researchers on the field of DSM
                  to discuss and share experiences, present new
                  ideas on modeling and tools. The workshop follows
                  the structure found effective during the past
                  workshops: presentations of selected papers in the
                  morning and early afternoon and group work and its
                  reporting in the late afternoon. This year the
                  papers are organized into three themes: cases of
                  DSM language creation and use, DSM for special
                  domains and foundations of DSM. Together all these
                  contributions form a basis for fruitful
                  discussions on creation, use and refinement of DSM
                  and supporting tools. The electronic version of
                  the proceedings, presentation slides and group
                  work results is available at
                  www.dsmforum.org/events. We thank our program
                  committee who donated their time and energy to
                  review the papers. We hope you find the results of
                  DSM’05 beneficial and enjoyable.},
        URL = {http://chess.eecs.berkeley.edu/pubs/71.html}
    }
    

Posted by Jonathan Sprinkle on 9 May 2006.
Groups: chess
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