Author :
Kienle, Holger M. ; Kuhn, A. ; Mens, Kim ; van den Brand, M. ; Wuyts, R.
Abstract :
At the first International Workshop on Advanced Software Development Tools and Techniques, four emerging trends in academic tool building were evident. First, tools are increasingly constructed on the basis of external code, reusing, for instance, existing frameworks and integrated development environments. Second, researchers often choose dynamic languages such as Smalltalk to implement prototype tools. Third, Web-based tools are starting to incorporate Web 2.0 technologies to improve user interaction. Finally, increasing computational resources allow tools to tackle larger, real-world code bases.
Keywords :
Internet; Smalltalk; human computer interaction; resource allocation; software reusability; software tools; Smalltalk; Web 2.0 technology; Web-based tool; academic tool building; computational resource; dynamic language; software development tool; software reusing; user interaction; Design engineering; Java; Libraries; Object oriented modeling; Object oriented programming; Software engineering; Software prototyping; Software tools; User interfaces; Visualization; Web-based user interfaces; dynamic languages; reuse; scalability; tool building;