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Data Structure Listings
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60 | Displaying: 41 - 50 | Pages: << 1 2 3 4 5 6 >> |
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This report is the product of a panel convened by the Board on Mathematical Sciences' Committee on Applied and Theoretical Statistics (CATS) to identify challenges and opportunities in software development and implementation that have a significant statistical component. In attempting to identify interrelated aspects of statistics and software engineering, it enunciates a new interdisciplinary field: statistical software engineering . While emphasizing the relevance of applying rigorous statistical and probabilistic techniques to problems in software engineering, the panel also points out opportunities for further research in the statistical sciences and their applications to software engineering
Updated: 02/20/2005
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This thesis builds a foundation for the study of software engineering methodologies and then categorizes the conditions under which one software engineering methodology will be preferred over another software engineering methodology. Predicted performance characteristics for several major classes of software engineering methodologies under a variety of conditions are presented.
Updated: 02/20/2005
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Open Source Development with CVS
Updated: 02/20/2005
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Using Z: Specification, Refinement, and Proof
Updated: 02/20/2005
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The ePMbook is double-e'd. It is an ebook about eProject Management as well as conventional Programme and Project Management. Its aim is to examine issues, needs and approaches in a variety of situations and environments. It should give you the ability to understand what is needed and why, plus how you can best address those needs.
Updated: 02/20/2005
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This book should appeal to researchers and practitioners familiar with object-oriented technology, who are interested in research trends related to software composition. Although this book was not designed as a textbook, it would be suitable for an advanced seminar on object-oriented research. Individual chapters can be read independently. The order of presentation has been selected mainly to illustrate a progression of ideas from programming language design issues to environments and applications. Not only is the "Geneva view" of object-oriented development presented, but considerable effort has gone into placing the work in context, and several of the chapters contain extensive surveys of related work.
Updated: 02/20/2005
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This book is to provide a practitioner's guide for students, programmers, engineers, and scientists who wish to design and build efficient and cost-effective programs for parallel and distributed computer systems. I cover both the techniques used to design parallel programs and the tools used to implement these programs. I assume familiarity with sequential programming, but no prior exposure to parallel computing.
Updated: 02/20/2005
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This book, the first entirely devoted to this important form of human/computer interaction, provides detailed theoretical and empirical information of interest to software designers and human/computer interaction specialists and researchers. A new theoretical approach to menu selection is taken by developing a psychological theory of cognitive control by the user. A comprehensive review of empirical research on menu selection is presented in an organized fashion to aid in the design and evaluation of systems. Finally, information is given on how to protype and evaluate menu selection systems using both performance data and user ratings.
Updated: 02/20/2005
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This book is intended to help the reader better understand the role of analysis and design in the object-oriented software development process. Experiments to use structured analysis and design as precursors to an object-oriented implementation have failed. The descriptions produced by the structured methods partition reality along the wrong dimensions. Classes are not recognized and inheritance as an abstraction mechanism is not exploited. However, we are fortunate that a multitude of object-oriented analysis and design methods have emerged and are still under development. Core OO notions have found their home place in the analysis phase. Abstraction and specialization via inheritance, originally advertised as key ingredients of OO programming, have been abstracted into key ingredients of OO analysis (OOA). Analysis-level property inheritance maps smoothly on the behavior inheritance of the programming realm.
Updated: 02/20/2005
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This is a preview of the book which will published by Pearson Education in about October 2004.
Updated: 02/13/2005
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Data Structure Listings
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Total:
60 | Displaying: 41 - 50 | Pages: << 1 2 3 4 5 6 >> |
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