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  • Broschiertes Buch

These are the proceedings of the second symposium on Generative and C- ponent-Based Software Engineering that was held in Erfurt, Germany, on - tober 9 12, 2000, as part of the Net. Object Days conference. The GCSE s- posium was born in 1999 at the Smalltalk and Java in Industry and Edu- tion Conference (STJA), the precursor to the Net. Object Days conference. The GCSE symposium grew out of a special track on generative programming that was organized by the working group Generative and Component-Based So- ware Engineering of the Gesellschaft fur Informatik FG 2. 1. 9 at STJA in the two years…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
These are the proceedings of the second symposium on Generative and C- ponent-Based Software Engineering that was held in Erfurt, Germany, on - tober 9 12, 2000, as part of the Net. Object Days conference. The GCSE s- posium was born in 1999 at the Smalltalk and Java in Industry and Edu- tion Conference (STJA), the precursor to the Net. Object Days conference. The GCSE symposium grew out of a special track on generative programming that was organized by the working group Generative and Component-Based So- ware Engineering of the Gesellschaft fur Informatik FG 2. 1. 9 at STJA in the two years 1997 and 1998. The GCSE symposium covers a wide range of related topics from domain analysis, software system family engineering, and software product lines, to extendible compilers and active libraries. The second GCSE symposium attracted 29 submissions from all over the world. This impressive number demonstrates the international interest in g- erative programming and related ?elds. After acareful review by the program committee, 12 papers were selected for presentation. We are very grateful to the members of the program committee, all of them renowned experts, for their dedication in preparing thorough reviews of the submissions. Special thanks go to Elke Pulvermuller , Andreas Speck, Kai B ollert, Detlef Streitferdt, and Dirk Heuzeroth, who continued the tradition from GCSE 99 and organized a special conference event, the Young Researchers Workshop (YRW). This workshop provided a unique opportunity for young scientists and Ph. D.