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12th OOPSLA 1997: Atlanta, GA, USA - Addendum
- Jim Haungs:
Addendum to the 1997 ACM SIGPLAN Conference on Object-Oriented Programming, Systems, Languages, and Applications, OOPSLA Addendum 1997, Atlanta, Georgia, USA, October 5-9, 1997. ACM 1997, ISBN 978-1-58113-037-9 - Karen Hope, Peter Symon:
Foundation: a model for concurrent project development. 1-5 - Periannan Chandrasekaran:
How use case modeling policies have affected the success of various projects (or how to improve use case modeling). 6-9 - Bernd Bruegge, Truman Fenton, Tae Wook Kim, Ricardo Pravia, Aseem Sharma, Benedict Fernandes, Seongju Chang, Volker Hartkopf:
Turning light bulbs into objects. 10-15 - Sandeep K. Singhal, Binh Q. Nguyen, Michael Fraenkel, Richard Redpath, Jimmy Nguyen:
Building high-performance applications and services in Java: an experiential study. 16-20 - Gerald Zincke:
How to achieve 7.52 function-points per person-day with object technology. 21-26 - Gordon Sheppard:
Experiences developing a bank loan system. 27-32 - Richard Garzaniti, Jim Haungs, Chet Hendrickson:
Everything I need to know I learned from the Chrysler payroll project. 33-38 - Richard Jordan, Mark O'Riordan, Tom J. Williams:
Reflections on the ORB: a look back at our experience building an ORB-based architecture. 39-44 - Sven-Erik Johansson, Benedikte Harstad Kallåk, Thomas Bech Pettersen, Jan Erik Ressem:
Expert workflow: building knowledge-based workflow systems with object technology. 45-49 - Art Griesser:
A generic editor. 50-55 - Bindu Rama Rao:
Exploring largeness, complexity and scalability from the OOT perspective. 56-57 - Jeff Sutherland:
Business object design and implementation III. 58-62 - Rudolf K. Keller, Reinhard Schauer, Alistair Cockburn:
Object-oriented design quality. 63-67 - Haim Kilov, Bernhard Rumpe, Ian Simmonds:
Object-oriented behavioral semantics with an emphasis on semantics of large OO business specifications. 68-73 - Sholom Cohen:
Object technology, architectures and domain analysis. 74-79 - Andy Pols:
Requirements engineering: use cases and more. 80-84 - Ed Anderson, Mike Bradley, Rosemary Brinko:
Use case and business rules: styles of documenting business rules in use cases. 85-87 - Edward F. Gehringer:
Classifying and sharing O-O course materials reuse in the classroom. 88-92 - Vladimir Bacvanski, Jürgen Börstler:
Doing your first OO project: OO education issues in industry and academia. 93-96 - Jared Bruckner:
Overcoming cultural barriers to the adoption of object technology. 97-98 - Robert Biddle, Rick Mercer:
Resources for early object design education. 99-104 - Gary J. Chastek:
Object technology and product lines. 105-109 - Nancy Box:
OO technology for the insurance industry. 110-114 - Todd Hansen:
Development of successful object-oriented frameworks. 115-119 - Michael Duell, John Goodsen, Linda Rising:
Non-software examples of software design patterns. 120-124 - Tom O'Rourke, Gerard Meszaros:
Patterns in software architecture. 125-127 - Henry Balen:
CORBA and the WWW. 128-132 - Neelakantan Sundaresan, Vinay Rajagopalan:
Java paradigms for mobile agent facilities. 133-135 - Rachid Guerraoui, Jean-Charles Fabre, Gul Agha:
Dependable distributed object systems. 136-137 - James Huw Evans, Peter Dickman:
Garbage collection and memory management. 138-143 - Akmal B. Chaudhri:
Experiences using object data management in the real world. 144-149 - Granville Miller:
OO process and metrics for effort estimation. 150-151
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