Gandalf: software development environments
IEEE Transactions on Software Engineering
SDE 3 Proceedings of the third ACM SIGSOFT/SIGPLAN software engineering symposium on Practical software development environments
Modularity and reusability in attribute grammars
Acta Informatica
Building tightly integrated software development environments: the IPSEN approach
Building tightly integrated software development environments: the IPSEN approach
The object constraint language: precise modeling with UML
The object constraint language: precise modeling with UML
ACM Computing Surveys (CSUR)
TIGRA — an architectural style for enterprise application integration
ICSE '01 Proceedings of the 23rd International Conference on Software Engineering
xlinkit: a consistency checking and smart link generation service
ACM Transactions on Internet Technology (TOIT)
SDE 1 Proceedings of the first ACM SIGSOFT/SIGPLAN software engineering symposium on Practical software development environments
ACM Transactions on Software Engineering and Methodology (TOSEM)
IWSSD '96 Proceedings of the 8th International Workshop on Software Specification and Design
Consistency management with repair actions
Proceedings of the 25th International Conference on Software Engineering
Constructing Meta-CASE Workbenches by Exploiting Visual Language Generators
IEEE Transactions on Software Engineering
Compatibility of XML language versions
SCM'01/SCM'03 Proceedings of the 2001 ICSE Workshops on SCM 2001, and SCM 2003 conference on Software configuration management
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Financial institutions are increasingly using XML as a de-facto standard to represent and exchange information about their products and services. Their aim is to process transactions quickly, cost-effectively, and with minimal human intervention. Due to the nature of the financial industry, inconsistencies inevitably appear throughout the lifetime of a financial transaction and their resolution introduces cost and time overheads.We give an overview of requirements for inconsistency detection in our particular domain of interest: the over-the-counter (OTC) financial derivatives sector. We propose a taxonomy for the classes of consistency constraints that occur in this domain and present how xlinkit, a generic technology for managing the consistency of distributed documents, can be used to specify consistency constraints and detect transaction inconsistencies. We present the result of an evaluation where xlinkit has been used to specify the evaluation rules for version 1.0 of the Financial Products Markup Language (FpML). The results of that evaluation were so encouraging that they have led the FpML Steering Committee to consider xlinkit as the standard for specifying validation constraints throughout.