ACM Computing Surveys (CSUR)
Component-oriented software development
Communications of the ACM - Special issue on analysis and modeling in software development
Application development through reuse: the ITHACA tools environment
ACM SIGOIS Bulletin - Special issue on information system design support tools
Integrating structured databases into the Web: the MORE system
Selected papers of the first conference on World-Wide Web
SSR '95 Proceedings of the 1995 Symposium on Software reusability
Supporting Search for Reusable Software Objects
IEEE Transactions on Software Engineering - Special issue: best papers of the 17th International Conference on Software Engineering (ICSE-17)
Accessing relational databases from the World Wide Web
SIGMOD '96 Proceedings of the 1996 ACM SIGMOD international conference on Management of data
Databases on the Web: technologies for federation architectures and case studies
SIGMOD '97 Proceedings of the 1997 ACM SIGMOD international conference on Management of data
ADE—an architecture design environment for component-based software engineering
ICSE '97 Proceedings of the 19th international conference on Software engineering
Software engineering (on) the World Wide Web (workshop)
ICSE '97 Proceedings of the 19th international conference on Software engineering
Distributed software architectures (tutorial)
ICSE '97 Proceedings of the 19th international conference on Software engineering
Another nail to the coffin of faceted controlled-vocabulary component classification and retrieval
Proceedings of the 1997 symposium on Software reusability
Reuse library interoperability and the World Wide Web
Proceedings of the 1997 symposium on Software reusability
VLDB '97 Proceedings of the 23rd International Conference on Very Large Data Bases
Classifying Software for Reusability
IEEE Software
Networked information resource discovery: an overview of current issues
IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications
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A reuse library is an important element of formalizing the practice of reuse. It provides the mechanism to properly manage reusable components and make them available to software systems developers. Software developers welcome to the emergence of a robust marketplace of software components, as a highly competitive marketplace works to the advantage of both producers and consumers of software components. However, two essential requirements for a component marketplace have been slow to emerge: standard, interchangeable parts and the consumers' ability to find the right parts for the job at hand. Fortunately, recent advances and web technology are, at last, providing the means for satisfying these requirements. The goal of FedeRaL is to render the whole Internet as a federated reuse repository for reusable components.