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Domain-specific languages

ACM SIGPLAN Notices, 2000
We survey the literature available on the topic of domain-specific languages as used for the construction and maintenance of software systems. We list a selection of 75 key publications in the area, and provide a summary for each of the papers. Moreover, we discuss terminology, risks and benefits, example domain-specific languages, design methodologies,
van Deursen, A.   +2 more
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Domain specific languages

Companion to the 22nd ACM SIGPLAN conference on Object-oriented programming systems and applications companion, 2007
Every few years the computing industry sees the emergence of another "silver bullet". Our "trade" press follows the siren call, vendors become optimistic (at least the marketing departments), managers and developers think that all will be solved, and the customer is skeptical as usual.
Henry Balen   +3 more
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Domain-specific languages

36th Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences, 2003. Proceedings of the, 2003
A programming language is a notation for expressing computations (algorithms) in both machine and human readable form. Appropriate programming languages and tools may drastically reduce the cost of building new applications as well as maintaining existing ones.
J. Heering, M. Mernik, A.M. Sloane
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Domain-specific engineering of domain-specific languages

Proceedings of the 10th Workshop on Domain-Specific Modeling, 2010
Domain-specific modelling (DSM) enables experts of arbitrary domains to perform modelling tasks using familiar constructs. This contrasts with common code-centric development approaches where programmers deal with object-oriented approximations of higher level concepts.
Raphael Mannadiar, Hans Vangheluwe
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Semantic Domain-specific Languages

2019 International Multi-Conference on Engineering, Computer and Information Sciences (SIBIRCON), 2019
A rationale for the introduction of semantic domain-specific languages (sDSL) is discussed from the point of view of problems faced by IT industry. Goals and technological approaches for the development of sDSL are described. As well as mathematical model and foundation for such a concept is presented.
Vitaly S. Gumirov   +2 more
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Domain specific languages contextualized

Proceedings of the South African Institute of Computer Scientists and Information Technologists Conference on Knowledge, Innovation and Leadership in a Diverse, Multidisciplinary Environment, 2011
Many software systems attempt to provide solutions to problems located in the real-world. Problem frames identify specific combinations, and interactions, of problems, real-world domains, and requirements. Domain-Specific Languages (DSL's) are exemplary in their ability to provide solutions to specific problem domains.
Michael H. Matthee, Stephen P. Levitt
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On Domain-Specific Languages Reengineering

2005
Domain-specific languages (DSL) provides high-level functions making applications easier to write, and to maintain. Unfortunately, many applications are written from scratch and poorly documented, which make them hard to maintain. An ideal solution should be to rewrite them in a appropriate DSL.
Alias, Christophe, Barthou, Denis
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Folding domain-specific languages

ACM SIGPLAN Notices, 2014
A domain-specific language can be implemented by embedding within a general-purpose host language. This embedding may be deep or shallow , depending on whether terms in the language construct syntactic or semantic representations.
Jeremy Gibbons, Nicolas Wu
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Domain specific meta languages

Proceedings of the 2000 ACM symposium on Applied computing - Volume 2, 2000
There are several di erent problem domains in the implementation of language processing tools. The manipulation of textual data when generating code, creation and inspection of environments during type checking, and analysis of dependency graphs during program optimization and parallelization are but a few.
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Domain-specific query languages

2022
Data is a valuable commodity, and while there are many methods for effectively processing data, at the core of many of these is a query language - either general purpose, such as SQL and SPARQL, or domain-specific. Examples of the latter are query languages for linguistic annotations such as LPath+ and EmuQL.
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