Software Language Engineering: Creating Domain-Specific Languages Using Metamodels, ePub
Product Description
This is the eBook version of the printed book. If the print book includes a CD-ROM, this content is not included within the eBook version.
Software practitioners are rapidly discovering the immense value of Domain-Specific Languages (DSLs) in solving problems within clearly definable problem domains. Developers are applying DSLs to improve productivity and quality in a wide range of areas, such as finance, combat simulation, macro scripting, image generation, and more. But until now, there have been few practical resources that explain how DSLs work and how to construct them for optimal use.
Software Language Engineering fills that need. Written by expert DSL consultant Anneke Kleppe, this is the first comprehensive guide to successful DSL design. Kleppe systematically introduces and explains every ingredient of an effective
language specification, including its description of concepts, how those concepts are denoted, and what those concepts mean in relation to the problem domain. Kleppe carefully illuminates good design strategy, showing how to maximize the flexibility of the languages you create. She also demonstrates powerful techniques for creating new DSLs that cooperate well with general-purpose languages and leverage their power.
Completely tool-independent, this book can serve as the primary resource for readers using Microsoft DSL tools, the Eclipse Modeling Framework, openArchitectureWare, or any other DSL toolset. It contains multiple examples, an illustrative running case study, and insights and background information drawn from Kleppe’s leading-edge work as a DSL researcher.
Specific topics covered include
-
Discovering the types of problems that DSLs can solve, and when to use them
-
Comparing DSLs with general-purpose languages, frameworks, APIs, and other approaches
-
Understanding the roles and tools available to language users and engineers
-
Creating each component of a DSL specification
-
Modeling both concrete and abstract syntax
-
Understanding and describing language semantics
-
Defining textual and visual languages based on object-oriented metamodeling and graph transformations
-
Using metamodels and associated tools to generate grammars
-
Integrating object-oriented modeling with graph theory
-
Building code generators for new languages
-
Supporting multilanguage models and programs
This book provides software engineers with all the guidance they need to create DSLs that solve real problems more rapidly, and with higher-quality code.
About the Author
Anneke Kleppe has over twenty years of experience in IT. She started her career in telecommunications and then worked as an independent consultant with her own company, Klasse Objecten. She has coached and trained employees of companies working with MDA, OCL, and UML. Currently, she is a consultant at Capgemini and is responsible for the introduction of domain-specific languages for various clients.
Buy Software Language Engineering: Creating Domain-Specific Languages Using Metamodels, ePub at Amazon
Buy Software Language Engineering: Creating Domain-Specific Languages Using Metamodels, ePub at Amazon
Related Posts
- The First Men in the Moon
- BOSTON Vs FASHION Match Race 1842 Horse Race
- A Darker Domain: A Novel
- Recent Developments in Domain Decomposition Methods
- Active Directory Domain Services 2008 How-To, ePub
- The Domain Name Handbook
- Deep Domain
- Dragon Domain--Book Two of the Dragon Clan Trilogy
- Domain Profits - With domain flipping, you can literally take a $9 domain name and flip it for $90, $900, even $9,000 dollars quickly and easily.
- How to Make Money from Public Domain Information.
Tagged with: Creating • DomainSpecific • Engineering • ePub • Language • Languages • Metamodels • Software • using
Filed under: domain name marketing
Like this post? Subscribe to my RSS feed and get loads more!





SOFTWARE LANGUAGE ENGINEERING: CREATING DOMAIN-SPECIFIC LANGUAGES USING METAMODELS is written by a DSL consultant and is the first in-depth guide to DSL design, covering language specification, concepts, DSL components and modeling, and much more. A fine survey of DSL frameworks, APIs, and different approaches, this will reach any college-level, advanced library catering to IT programmers.
The author’s reinvent terms that are already known for decades in computer science. Instead of building on top of existing knowledge she tries to create her own concepts but fails. If you are looking for information on Domain-Specific Languages or in programming languages in general stay away from this book.