The QUEST-approach for the performance evaluation of SDL-systems
IFIP TC6/ 6.1 international conference on formal description techniques IX/protocol specification, testing and verification XVI on Formal description techniques IX : theory, application and tools: theory, application and tools
Algebraic approaches to graph transformation. Part I: basic concepts and double pushout approach
Handbook of graph grammars and computing by graph transformation
Distributed graph transformation with application to visual design of distributed systems
Handbook of graph grammars and computing by graph transformation
The AGG approach: language and environment
Handbook of graph grammars and computing by graph transformation
Tool Support for ViewPoint-oriented Software Development
AGTIVE '99 Proceedings of the International Workshop on Applications of Graph Transformations with Industrial Relevance
RE '99 Proceedings of the 4th IEEE International Symposium on Requirements Engineering
Formal Design and Perfomance Evaluation of Parallel and Distributed Software Systems
PDSE '98 Proceedings of the International Symposium on Software Engineering for Parallel and Distributed Systems
To Be and Not to Be: On Managing Inconsistency in Software Development
IWSSD '96 Proceedings of the 8th International Workshop on Software Specification and Design
A Combined Graph Schema and Graph Grammar Approach to Consistency in Distributed Data Modeling
AGTIVE '99 Proceedings of the International Workshop on Applications of Graph Transformations with Industrial Relevance
Tool Support for ViewPoint-oriented Software Development
AGTIVE '99 Proceedings of the International Workshop on Applications of Graph Transformations with Industrial Relevance
Proceedings of the 13th International Conference on Humans and Computers
Software and Systems Modeling (SoSyM)
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In order to support multiple perspectives in software development one needs a scheme which expresses explicitly all the views held by the various stakeholders like requirements engineer, software architect, client, user etc. The View Points framework has been developed in the past as a conceptional framework for expressing such a multiple perspective setting in software development projects. In this contribution we describe how this framework is formally described by distributed graph transformation and we demonstrate the applicability of our approach by presenting a non-trivial sample system.