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10th OOPSLA 1995: Austin, TX, USA - Addendum
- Steven Craig Bilow, Patricia S. Bilow:
Addendum to the Proceedings of the 10th Annual Conference on Object-Oriented Programming Systems, Languages, and Applications, OOPSLA 1995 Addendum, Austin, Texas, USA, October 15-19, 1995. ACM 1995, ISBN 978-0-89791-721-6 - Bjarne Stroustrup:
Why C++ is not just an object-oriented programming language. 1-13 - Andrew Koenig:
Idiomatic design. 14-19 - Bertrand Meyer:
Static typing. 20-29 - Adele Goldberg:
What should we teach? 30-37 - Steven Fraser, Honna Segel, James Coplien, Judith White:
Application of domain analysis to object-oriented systems. 46-49 - Debbie Meadows, Charles R. Gardner:
Building and performance tuning a distributed reporting application for an OODBMS. 50-55 - Charles R. Gardner:
Performance of an OODB in an online 7×24×365 manufacturing operation. 56-60 - Stephen W. Strom, William F. Rich, Matthew T. Verona:
The Navigation Toolkit project revisited. 61-66 - Steven Marney, Mamdouh Ibrahim:
Using objects to manage in-memory data intensive expert systems. 67-71 - Jeff L. Burgett, Sheryl J. Adam:
Applying Object-Oriented Software Engineering Methods to the development of call center software: a case study. 72-76 - John Radford:
Implementing a real-time, embedded, telecommunication switching system in Smalltalk. 77-82 - Mary Beth Rosson:
OOPSLA '95 Doctoral Symposium. 83-84 - Steven Fraser, Honna Segel, Grady Booch, Frank Buschmann, James Coplien, Norman L. Kerth, Ivar Jacobson, Mary Beth Rosson:
Patterns (Panel): cult to culture?. 85-88 - Laura Hill, Douglas Johnson, Kenneth S. Rubin, Charles Berman, James Coplien, John Daniels:
Object-oriented project management (panel). 89-93 - Dennis Mancl, Frank Armour, Todd Cotton, Geoff Hambrick, Gregg Vesonder:
Tailoring OO analysis and design methods (panel). 94-99 - Dipayan Gangopadhyay, Wolfgang Pree, Albert Schappert:
Framework-centered software development: report on the workshop. 100-104 - Hafedh Mili, François Pachet, Ilham Benyahia, Frederick Eddy:
Metamodeling in OO: OOPSLA'95 workshop summary. 105-110 - Haim Kilov, Bill Harvey, Kevin Tyson:
Semantic integration in complex systems: collective behavior in business rules and software transactions. 111-116 - William H. Harrison, Harold Ossher, Hafedh Mili:
Subjectivity in object-oriented systems: workshop summary. 117-122 - Fred A. Cummins, Roman Cunis, Gail Harris:
The object engine: foundation for next generation architectures. 123-127 - Dennis G. Kafura, R. Greg Lavender, Douglas C. Schmidt:
Workshop on design patterns for concurrent, parallel, and distributed object-oriented system. 128-131 - Gerard Meszaros:
Patterns for decision making in architectural design: workshop summary. 132-137 - Dennis de Champeaux, Simon Horner, Granville Miller:
OO process and metrics for effort estimation. 138-142 - Barbara Yates:
Testing Smalltalk applications. 143-148 - Karl J. Lieberherr:
Workshop on adaptable and adaptive software. 149-154 - K. Narayanaswamy, Adrian Blakey:
Are object-oriented CASE frameworks ready for prime time? 155-158 - Benjamin G. Zorn, Akmal B. Chaudhri:
Object database behavior, benchmarks, and performance: workshop addendum. 159-163 - Jen-Yao Chung, Yi-Jing Lin, Daniel T. Chang:
Object and relational databases. 164-169 - Jeff Sutherland:
Business object design and implementation workshop. 170-175 - Yeona Jang:
Legacy systems and object technology: workshop summary. 176-179 - Antero Taivalsaari, Roland Trauter, Eduardo Casais:
Workshop on object-oriented legacy systems and software evolution . 180-185 - Ashutosh Tiwary, Rajendra K. Raj, Doug Lea, Christopher J. Bosch:
Building large distributed software systems using objects. 191-195 - George Brown, Brad Kain:
Design and construction of large-scale components: main insights of OOPSLA'95 workshop 10. 196-202 - Bob Wilhelm, John Gilbert, Mohamed Fayad:
Object-oriented real-time systems: report on the workshop. 203-208 - Shail Arora:
Object-oriented technology for health care and medical information systems: workshop report. 209-212 - Chris Laffra:
Workshop 22: OO technology in large financial institutions. 213-217
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