languageworkbenches.net
LWC2014: wrap-up | Language Workbench Challenge
http://www.languageworkbenches.net/2014/04/lwc2014-wrap-up
Comparing Tools of the Trade. April 23, 2014. It’s a wrap! The Language Workbench Challenge, co-located with the Code Generation conference at the Churchill College, Cambridge, UK, once again was a very nice day featuring demos of 7 language workbenches and their newest features. But above all it was joy to meet all the participants and “non-challenging” attendees and exchange knowledge, views and experiences. LWC 2014 organisers, speakers and delegates. After an initial misunderstanding was rectified in...
languageworkbenches.net
Language Workbenches | Language Workbench Challenge
http://www.languageworkbenches.net/category/language-workbenches
Comparing Tools of the Trade. Category Archives: Language Workbenches. August 11, 2014. Tijs van der Storm of the CWI. Presented the latest developments on Rascal. Although Rascal doesn’t call itself a language workbench but rather a programming language aimed at source code and meta programming. Consequently, and because of libraries enabling integration in the Eclipse IDE, it can be construed as a language workbench after all. The Whole Platform (from now on: WP) , as MPS, uses projectional visualisati...
languageworkbenches.net
Meinte Boersma | Language Workbench Challenge
http://www.languageworkbenches.net/author/meinte
Comparing Tools of the Trade. All posts by Meinte Boersma. August 11, 2014. Tijs van der Storm of the CWI. Presented the latest developments on Rascal. Although Rascal doesn’t call itself a language workbench but rather a programming language aimed at source code and meta programming. Consequently, and because of libraries enabling integration in the Eclipse IDE, it can be construed as a language workbench after all. That no-one so far had heard about but was surprisingly mature and especially:. The Whol...
languageworkbenches.net
Model Driven Development | Language Workbench Challenge
http://www.languageworkbenches.net/category/model-driven-development
Comparing Tools of the Trade. Category Archives: Model Driven Development. April 23, 2014. It’s a wrap! The Language Workbench Challenge, co-located with the Code Generation conference at the Churchill College, Cambridge, UK, once again was a very nice day featuring demos of 7 language workbenches and their newest features. But above all it was joy to meet all the participants and “non-challenging” attendees and exchange knowledge, views and experiences. LWC 2014 organisers, speakers and delegates. After...
dslmeinte.wordpress.com
Multi-level modeling: what, why and how | Meinte's DSL Blog
https://dslmeinte.wordpress.com/2014/10/04/multi-level-modeling-what-why-and-how
Meinte's DSL Blog. My thoughts on DSLs, model-driven software engineering. Multi-level modeling: what, why and how. Multi-level modeling: what, why and how. October 4, 2014. One of the arguably-classical problems of language engineering is. But in this blog I only will talk about multi-level. For an actual example, consider the following grammar of an Xtext implementation of this DSL. The main drawbacks to this approach are:. It requires quite some constraints to get this to work correctly. The implement...
blog.abstratt.com
» Generating a MEAN-style web application from models (T plus 1 days)
https://blog.abstratt.com/2014/10/17/generating-a-mean-style-web-application-from-models-t-plus-1-days
We have one obsession: stopping people from writing so much code. Generating a MEAN-style web application from models (T plus 1 days). October 17, 2014. This is the last installment to a series started about two weeks ago. If you remember, I set off to build a code generator that could produce 100% of the code for a business application targeting the MEAN (for Mongo, Express, Node.js and Angular) stack. I am writing this a day after the presentation took place. This entry was posted in action language.
SOCIAL ENGAGEMENT