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UML 2002 - The Unified Modeling Language: Model Engineering, Concepts, and Tools

5th International Conference, Dresden, Germany, September 30 October 4, 2002. Proceedings

  • Conference proceedings
  • © 2002

Overview

Part of the book series: Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS, volume 2460)

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Conference proceedings info: UML 2002.

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Table of contents (34 papers)

  1. Invited Talk 1

  2. Metamodelling

  3. Applying the UML

  4. Digging into the Metamodel

  5. Experience with MDA

  6. Invited Talk 2

  7. Real-Time & Formal Semantics

  8. Model Engineering 1

Keywords

About this book

Five years on from its adoption in 1997 by the Object Management Group (OMG), the Uni?ed Modeling Language is the de facto standard for creating - agrammatic models of software systems. More than 100 books have been written about UML, and it is taught to students throughout the world. The de?nition of UML version 2 is well under way, and should be largely completed within the year. This will not only improve and enhance UML itself, including standard facilities for diagram interchange, but also make it fully integrated with other modeling technologies from the OMG, such as Meta-Object Facility (MOF) and XML Metadata Interchange (XMI). The Object Constraint Language, which has become an important vehicle for communicating detailed insights between UML researchers and practitioners, will have a much expanded speci?cation and be better integrated with the UML. The popularity of UML signi?es the possibility of a shift of immense prop- tions in the practice of software development, at least comparable to the shift from the use of assembly language to “third-generation” or “high-level” p- gramming languages. We dream of describing the behavior of software systems in terms of models, closely related to the needs of the enterprise being served, and being able to routinely translate these models automatically into executing p- grams on distributed computing systems. The OMG is promoting Model-Driven Architecture (MDA) as a signi?cant step towards this vision, and the MDA c- cept has received considerable support within the IT industry.

Editors and Affiliations

  • Irisa - Univesité de Rennes 1, Rennes cedex, France

    Jean-Marc Jézéquel

  • Fakultät Informatik, Technische Universität Dresden, Dresden, Germany

    Heinrich Hussmann

  • IBM United Kingdom Ltd, Middlesex, UK

    Stephen Cook

Bibliographic Information

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