softwarechimps.blogspot.com
Software Chimps: Webcasts: Modeling with domain-specific languages
http://softwarechimps.blogspot.com/2007/02/webcasts-modeling-with-domain-specific.html
Unlikely you take advice from a monkey, this blog does not aim to give it. View my complete profile. Friday, February 23, 2007. Webcasts: Modeling with domain-specific languages. Have a look at. The API example shows a nice example of what it means to integrate your DSL supporting environment with 3rd party tools, such as an emulator for testing purposes: model-based debugging. Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom). Webcasts: Modeling with domain-specific languages. Code Generation 2007 - Program.
precisionsoftware.blogspot.com
Precision Software Design, LLC: November 2008
http://precisionsoftware.blogspot.com/2008_11_01_archive.html
Precision Software Design, LLC. Monday, November 17, 2008. Dogfooding (verb) - In a nutshell, dogfooding means "using your own product". A product which is being dogfooded tends to be a lot more polished. When a normal user is annoyed by the product, they can't do anything about it. But when a developer is annoyed by the product, they can stop what they are doing and make the product less annoying. (From http:/ www.urbandictionary.com). What a month it has been at Precision Software. What I love about Sm...
dslindotnet.blogspot.com
DSL in .Net: Februar 2011
http://dslindotnet.blogspot.com/2011_02_01_archive.html
DSL in .Net. Mittwoch, 16. Februar 2011. How to start with Visual Studio DSL Tools. Official page: Visual Studio Visualization and Modeling SDK (was DSL SDK). Book about DSL Tools: http:/ www.doma. 2007, nothing later found). Learn DSL Tools fast: Visualization and Modeling SDK (DSL Tools) Lab. Diesen Post per E-Mail versenden. Dienstag, 15. Februar 2011. Exploring Visual Studio DSL Tools. Introduction to DSL Languages in Visual Studio. Diesen Post per E-Mail versenden. Sonntag, 6. Februar 2011.
metacase.com
Steven Kelly on DSM
http://www.metacase.com/blogs/stevek/blogView
Cincom Smalltalk Community Blogs. Steven Kelly on DSM. Domain-Specific Modeling: A Toolmaker Perspective. Powered by Cincom Smalltalk. Opinions expressed in this blog are not necessarily those of MetaCase or its management. Ontologies and Domain-Specific Modeling. September 04, 2014 17:06:47 0300 (EEST). A little while back a customer asked about the difference between DSM and ontologies, here's my opinion. Describing something that exists. Designing something that will be created. XML schema and instance.
softwarechimps.blogspot.com
Software Chimps: November 2006
http://softwarechimps.blogspot.com/2006_11_01_archive.html
Unlikely you take advice from a monkey, this blog does not aim to give it. View my complete profile. Wednesday, November 29, 2006. Domain-Specific Modeling promises to change software development in many companies by changing models from being a bunch of out-of-date rectangles, diamonds and lines to executable representations of solutions in domain-terms. Models no longer depict the soon-to-be-roundtripped, visual representation of the code you need to write later. Instead, the implementation is ...More ...
softwarechimps.blogspot.com
Software Chimps: December 2006
http://softwarechimps.blogspot.com/2006_12_01_archive.html
Unlikely you take advice from a monkey, this blog does not aim to give it. View my complete profile. Thursday, December 28, 2006. The cost of building DSL / DSM tools. Most of the costs of developing software are attributed to the maintenance phase (often I hear 80%). Heard anyone disagree with that. Often I hear the question on how software development with DSL's relates to this wisdom. It's a good question with a simple answer, but there is a better question. Sure, you can get an MDA tool, based on the...
kirillosenkov.blogspot.com
Kirill Osenkov: August 2007
http://kirillosenkov.blogspot.com/2007_08_01_archive.html
Design of developer tools, architecture, .NET. Inherit from more fine-granular interfaces. In my previous post I hinted about a rule which I apply to the design of interfaces:. An interface should have at most one member. This is to emphasize, that interfaces often model. That are mixed in to the main entity. And you mostly need only one member to model an ability. BagAdd(stuff1); . bag.Add(stuff1000000);. BagAdd(stuff1); . bag.Add(stuff1000000);. I'm using only the Add ability of the bag inside the meth...
kirillosenkov.blogspot.com
Kirill Osenkov: New blog about design and developer tools
http://kirillosenkov.blogspot.com/2007/08/new-blog-about-design-and-developer.html
Design of developer tools, architecture, .NET. New blog about design and developer tools. I can't resist anymore. I have to start blogging. First things first - an introduction. My name is Kirill Osenkov. And one could say that I'm a software developer who develops software for software developers. That puts it quite nicely - my main interests are currently in the design and architecture of developer tools. I spent two summer internships at Microsoft working with the DSL Tools. C#: Tabs or Spaces? Choosi...