Agile modeling: effective practices for extreme programming and the unified process
Agile modeling: effective practices for extreme programming and the unified process
Agile Modeling: A Brief Overview
Workshop of the pUML-Group held together with the «UML»2001 on Practical UML-Based Rigorous Development Methods - Countering or Integrating the eXtremists
EMF: Eclipse Modeling Framework 2.0
EMF: Eclipse Modeling Framework 2.0
Matching class diagrams: with estimated costs towards the exact solution?
Proceedings of the 2008 international workshop on Comparison and versioning of software models
ATL: A model transformation tool
Science of Computer Programming
SUMLOW: early design-stage sketching of UML diagrams on an E-whiteboard
Software—Practice & Experience
Towards Roundtrip Engineering - A Template-Based Reverse Engineering Approach
ECMDA-FA '08 Proceedings of the 4th European conference on Model Driven Architecture: Foundations and Applications
Eclipse Modeling Project: A Domain-Specific Language (DSL) Toolkit
Eclipse Modeling Project: A Domain-Specific Language (DSL) Toolkit
Trainable sketch recognizer for graphical user interface design
INTERACT'07 Proceedings of the 11th IFIP TC 13 international conference on Human-computer interaction
A formal approach to three-way merging of EMF models
Proceedings of the 1st International Workshop on Model Comparison in Practice
The software design board: a tool supporting workstyle transitions in collaborative software design
EHCI-DSVIS'04 Proceedings of the 2004 international conference on Engineering Human Computer Interaction and Interactive Systems
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Model-driven development is a well-known practice in modern software engineering. A wide variety of different tools exist, which support model-driven development. Usually, these tools do not provide dedicated support for agile modeling, as they can be used with any development process. In this paper, we present an extension to our UML-based modeling tool Valkyrie which allows free-hand diagram sketching. Thus, it addresses agile modeling as whiteboards and papers can now be replaced with tablet computers or other touch-enabled (hand-held) devices.