The C++ programming language
OOPSLA '88 Conference proceedings on Object-oriented programming systems, languages and applications
A system for specifying and rapidly prototyping user interfaces
Taking software design seriously
Separating application code from toolkits: eliminating the spaghetti of call-backs
UIST '91 Proceedings of the 4th annual ACM symposium on User interface software and technology
Intelligent help in a one-shot dialog: a protocol study
CHI '87 Proceedings of the SIGCHI/GI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems and Graphics Interface
Developing Software for the User Interface
Developing Software for the User Interface
User-Interface Tools: Introduction and Survey
IEEE Software
THE X WINDOW SYSTEM
From research prototypes to usable, useful systems: lessons learned in the trenches
UIST '93 Proceedings of the 6th annual ACM symposium on User interface software and technology
User action graphing effort (UsAGE)
CHI '95 Conference Companion on Human Factors in Computing Systems
A Problem-Solving Workbench for Interactive Simulation of Ecosystems
IEEE Computational Science & Engineering
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The Transportable Applications Environment Plus (TAE Plus) is a NASA-developed user interface development environment (UIDE) for the rapid prototyping, evaluation, implementation, and management of user interfaces. TAE Plus provides an intuitive What You See Is What You Get (WYSIWYG) WorkBench for designing an application's user interface. The WorkBench supports the creation and sequencing of displays, including real-time, data-driven display objects. Users can define context-sensitive help for a target application. They can rehearse the user interface and also generate code automatically. In addition TAE Plus contains application services for the runtime manipulation and management of the user interface. Based on Motif and the MIT X Window System, TAE Plus runs on a variety of Unix- or VMS-based workstations. TAE Plus is an evolving system. User-defined requirements and new technology guide the development of each new version. Advances in virtual operating systems, human factors, computer graphics, command language design, standardization, and software portability are monitored and incorporated as they become available.