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Behavioral Specifications of Businesses and Systems 1999 ed. [Hardback]

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Behavioral Specifications of Businesses and Systems deals with the reading, writing and understanding of specifications. The papers presented in this book describe useful and sometimes elegant concepts, good practices (in programming and in specifications), and solid underlying theory that is of interest and importance to those who deal with increased complexity of business and systems. Most concepts have been successfully used in actual industrial projects, while others are from the forefront of research. Authors include practitioners, business thinkers, academics and applied mathematicians. These seemingly different papers address different aspects of a single problem - taming complexity.
Behavioral Specifications of Businesses and Systems emphasizes simplicity and elegance in specifications without concentrating on particular methodologies, languages or tools. It shows how to handle complexity, and, specifically, how to succeed in understanding and specifying businesses and systems based upon precise and abstract concepts. It promotes reuse of such concepts, and of constructs based on them, without taking reuse for granted.
Behavioral Specifications of Businesses and Systems is the second volume of papers based on a series of workshops held alongside ACM's annual conference on Object-Oriented Programming Systems Languages and Applications (OOPSLA) and European Conference on Object-Oriented Programming (ECOOP). The first volume, Object-Oriented Behavioral Specifications, edited by Haim Kilov and William Harvey, was published by Kluwer Academic Publishers in 1996.

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Springer Book Archives
Preface vii Object-oriented transformation 1(14) Kenneth Baclawski Scott DeLoach Mieczyslaw Kokar Jeffrey Smith Being served: The purposes, strengths and limitations of formal service modelling 15(12) Bernard Cohen What vs. how of visual modeling: The arrow-diagram logic of visual modeling 27(18) Zinovy Diskin Boris Kadish Frank Piessens Meta-modeling semantics of UML 45(16) Andy Evans Robert France Kevin Lano Bernhard Rumpe Combining JSD and Cleanroom for object-oriented scenario specification 61(14) Marc Frappier Richard St-Denis What is behind UML-RT 75(16) Radu Grosu Manfred Broy Bran Selic Gheorghe Stefanescu Applying ISO RM-ODP in the specification of CORBA® interfaces and semantics to general ledger systems 91(14) Jack Hassall John Eaton Component-based algebraic specifications 105(18) Shusaku Iida Kokichi Futatsugi Razvan Diaconescu A meta-model semantics for structural constraints in UML 123(18) Stuart Kent Stephen Gaito Niall Ross On the structure of convincing specifications 141(20) Haim Kilov Allan Ash Formalising the UML in structured temporal theories 161(14) Kevin Lano Juan Bicarregui JML: A notation for detailed design 175(14) Gary Leavens Albert Baker Clyde Ruby Agents: Between order and chaos 189(6) James Odell UML, the future standard software architecture description language? 195(14) Andy Schurr Andreas Winter Using information modeling to define business requirements 209(10) Mark Shafer A layered context perspective on enterprises and information systems 219(18) Ian Simmonds David Ing 30 Things that go wrong in object-oriented modelling with UML 1.3 237(22) Anthony Simons Ian Graham Formalizing association semantics in terminologies 259(12) Harold Solbrig On the specification of the business and economic foundations of electronic commerce 271(16) Angelo Thalassinidis Ira Sack Embedding object-oriented design in system engineering 287(24) Roel Wieringa Index 311