Designing object-oriented software
Designing object-oriented software
Optimizing Queries Across Diverse Data Sources
VLDB '97 Proceedings of the 23rd International Conference on Very Large Data Bases
Digital Libraries in Computer Science: The MeDoc Approach
Towards heterogeneous multimedia information systems: the Garlic approach
RIDE '95 Proceedings of the 5th International Workshop on Research Issues in Data Engineering-Distributed Object Management (RIDE-DOM'95)
High-Level Static and Dynamic Visualization of Software Architectures
VL '00 Proceedings of the 2000 IEEE International Symposium on Visual Languages (VL'00)
A bandwidth model for internet search
VLDB '02 Proceedings of the 28th international conference on Very Large Data Bases
An empirical assessment of using stereotypes to improve reading techniques in software inspections
3-WoSQ Proceedings of the third workshop on Software quality
Journal of Systems and Software - Special issue: Quality software
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Internet search engines today are facing problems in keeping upw ith the pace of web growth. Two facts are responsible: bandwidth bottlenecks due to central indexing; deep web (or invisible web) contents that are inaccessible for search engines. Powerful and flexibly extensible object-oriented frameworks are available that assist in the implementation of distributed search infrastructures, thus addressing the first problem. In order to address the second problem, searchability has to be designed into the online applications constituting the deep web, and integrations to the distributed search infrastructures have to be implemented. A model-driven approach to software construction can be used to specify an application's searchability. This paper presents an extension to the UML that can be used to specify an application's searchability in an efficient way. The resulting models can be used to generate large parts of the searchability implementation automatically.