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MDA Explained: The Model Driven Architecture¿: Practice and Promise

TLDR
Insight is given in what MDA means and what you can achieve, both today and in the future, thereby raising the level of maturity of the IT industry.
Abstract
From the Book: For many years, the three of us have been developing software using object oriented techniques. We started with object oriented programming languages, like C++, Smalltalk, and Eiffel. Soon we felt the need to describe our software at a higher level of abstraction. Even before the first object oriented analysis and design methods, like Coad/Yourdon and OMT, were published, we used our own invented bubbles and arrows diagrams. This naturally led to questions like "What does this arrow mean?" and "What is the difference between this circle and that rectangle?". We therefore rapidly decided to use the newly emerging methods to design and describe our software. During the years we found that we were spending more time on designing our models, than on writing code. The models helped us to cope with larger and more complex systems. Having a good model of the software available, made the process of writing code easier and in many cases even straightforward. In 1997 some of us got involved in defining the first standard for object oriented modeling called UML. This was a major milestone that stimulated the use of modeling in the software industry. When the OMG launched its initiative on Model Driven Architecture we felt that this was logically the next step to take. People try to get more and more value from their high level models, and the MDA approach supports these efforts. At that moment we realized that all these years we had naturally walked the path towards model driven development. Every bit of wisdom we acquired during our struggle with the systems we had to build, fitted in with this new idea of how to build software. It caused a feeling similar to an AHA-erlebnis: "Yes, this is it," the same feeling we had years before when we first encountered the object-oriented way of thinking, and again when we first read the GOF book on design patterns. We feel that MDA could very well be the next major step forward in the way software is being developed. MDA brings the focus of software development to a higher level of abstraction, thereby raising the level of maturity of the IT industry. We are aware of the fact that the grand vision of MDA, which Richard Soley, the president of the OMG, presents so eloquently, is not yet a reality. However some parts of MDA can already be used today, while others are under development. With this book we want to give you insight in what MDA means and what you can achieve, both today and in the future. Anneke Kleppe, Jos Warmer, and Wim Bast Soest, the Netherlands January 2003

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Citations
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Book ChapterDOI

A UML profile for modeling schema mappings

TL;DR: A UML profile is introduced which can be used to map local information schemata onto one global schema thus eliminating schema conflicts and it is claimed that this is the first time that the integration mapping can be specified within the UML model of the application.
Journal ArticleDOI

Automated Formalisation for Verification of Diagrammatic Models

TL;DR: Work-in-progress on tool support for formal verification of diagrammatic models is presented, which builds on Amalio's rigorous template-based approach to formalisation, which formally expresses the intended semantics of both the diagram notation and modelled system.
Journal ArticleDOI

An integrative approach to support multi-perspective business process modeling

TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed an integrative approach to support multi-perspective BPM, so as to bridge the identified modeling gaps and facilitate the creation of comprehensive models and facilitate a common understanding of business perspectives regardless of the languages that represent them.
Book ChapterDOI

Encapsulating application subsystems using the DECOS core OS

TL;DR: An approach to structured integration of different application subsystems on the same embedded hardware, as currently developed in DECOS (Dependable Embedded Components and Systems), an integrated project within the Sixth Framework Programme of the European Commission is presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Enabling Sophisticated Lifecycle Support for Mobile Healthcare Data Collection Applications

TL;DR: It is shown how healthcare experts are empowered to create mobile data collection and sensing applications on their own and with reasonable efforts with the core components of the QuestionSys framework.