Scenarios: Models, Transformations and Tools International Workshop, Dagstuhl Castle, Germany, September 7-12, 2003, Revised Selected Papers / [electronic resource] :
edited by Stefan Leue, Tarja J. Systä.
- 1st ed. 2005.
- XII, 279 p. online resource.
- Programming and Software Engineering, 3466 2945-9168 ; .
- Programming and Software Engineering, 3466 .
Scenarios: Models, Transformations and Tools -- Why Timed Sequence Diagrams Require Three-Event Semantics -- Some Methodological Observations Resulting from Experience Using LSCs and the Play-In/Play-Out Approach -- Deciding Properties of Message Sequence Charts -- Operational Semantics of Security Protocols -- Autonomous Shuttle System Case Study -- Genetic Design: Amplifying Our Ability to Deal With Requirements Complexity -- Applying Story Driven Modeling to the Paderborn Shuttle System Case Study -- Traceability and Evaluation in Scenario Analysis by Use Case Maps -- Scenario-Based Statistical Testing of Quality of Service Requirements -- Lightweight Formal Methods for Scenario-Based Software Engineering -- Pattern Synthesis from Multiple Scenarios for Parameterized Real-Time UML Models -- Partial Order Semantics of Sequence Diagrams for Mobility -- From MSC to SDL: Overview and an Application to the Autonomous Shuttle Transport System -- Component Synthesis from Service Specifications.
Visual notations and languages continue to play a pivotal role ˆ in the design of complex software systems. In many cases visual notations are used to - scribe usage or interaction scenarios of software systems or their components. While representing scenarios using a visual notation is not the only possibility, a vast majority of scenario description languages is visual. Scenarios are used in telecommunications as Message Sequence Charts, in object-oriented system design as Sequence Diagrams, in reverse engineering as execution traces, and in requirements engineering as, for example, Use Case Maps or Life Sequence Charts. These techniques are used to capture requirements, to capture use cases in system documentation, to specify test cases, or to visualize runs of existing systems. They are often employed to represent concurrent systems that int- act via message passing or method invocation. In telecommunications, for more than 15 years the International Telecommunication Union has standardized the Message Sequence Charts (MSCs) notation in its recommendation Z. 120. More recently, with the emergence of UML as a predominant software design meth- ology, there has been special interest in the development of the sequence d- gram notation. As a result, the most recent version, 2. 0, of UML encompasses the Message Sequence Chart notation, including its hierarchical modeling f- tures. Other scenario-?avored diagrams in UML 2. 0 include activity diagrams and timing diagrams.
9783540320326
10.1007/b137052 doi
Software engineering.
Computer science.
Computer networks .
Electronic data processing--Management.
Software Engineering.
Computer Science Logic and Foundations of Programming.
Computer Communication Networks.
IT Operations.
QA76.758
005.1
Scenarios: Models, Transformations and Tools -- Why Timed Sequence Diagrams Require Three-Event Semantics -- Some Methodological Observations Resulting from Experience Using LSCs and the Play-In/Play-Out Approach -- Deciding Properties of Message Sequence Charts -- Operational Semantics of Security Protocols -- Autonomous Shuttle System Case Study -- Genetic Design: Amplifying Our Ability to Deal With Requirements Complexity -- Applying Story Driven Modeling to the Paderborn Shuttle System Case Study -- Traceability and Evaluation in Scenario Analysis by Use Case Maps -- Scenario-Based Statistical Testing of Quality of Service Requirements -- Lightweight Formal Methods for Scenario-Based Software Engineering -- Pattern Synthesis from Multiple Scenarios for Parameterized Real-Time UML Models -- Partial Order Semantics of Sequence Diagrams for Mobility -- From MSC to SDL: Overview and an Application to the Autonomous Shuttle Transport System -- Component Synthesis from Service Specifications.
Visual notations and languages continue to play a pivotal role ˆ in the design of complex software systems. In many cases visual notations are used to - scribe usage or interaction scenarios of software systems or their components. While representing scenarios using a visual notation is not the only possibility, a vast majority of scenario description languages is visual. Scenarios are used in telecommunications as Message Sequence Charts, in object-oriented system design as Sequence Diagrams, in reverse engineering as execution traces, and in requirements engineering as, for example, Use Case Maps or Life Sequence Charts. These techniques are used to capture requirements, to capture use cases in system documentation, to specify test cases, or to visualize runs of existing systems. They are often employed to represent concurrent systems that int- act via message passing or method invocation. In telecommunications, for more than 15 years the International Telecommunication Union has standardized the Message Sequence Charts (MSCs) notation in its recommendation Z. 120. More recently, with the emergence of UML as a predominant software design meth- ology, there has been special interest in the development of the sequence d- gram notation. As a result, the most recent version, 2. 0, of UML encompasses the Message Sequence Chart notation, including its hierarchical modeling f- tures. Other scenario-?avored diagrams in UML 2. 0 include activity diagrams and timing diagrams.
9783540320326
10.1007/b137052 doi
Software engineering.
Computer science.
Computer networks .
Electronic data processing--Management.
Software Engineering.
Computer Science Logic and Foundations of Programming.
Computer Communication Networks.
IT Operations.
QA76.758
005.1