Programme |
Download CFP ![]() |
ACM Symposium on Applied Computing Riva del Garda (Trento), Italy March 25-29, 2012 |
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Paper Due September 7, 2011 [Updated] Author Notification Oct. 12, 2011 Camera Ready Nov. 2, 2011
Yvonne Coady
Corrado
Santoro
Emiliano
Tramontana
Programme Committee
Marco Aiello University of Groningen Netherlands Mehmet Aksit University of Twente Netherlands Joao Araujo University Nova de Lisboa Portugal Filippo Banno' Scuola Superiore Sant'Anna Italy Federico Bergenti University of Parma Italy Eric Bodden Technical University Darmstadt Germany Walter Cazzola University of Milano Italy Shigeru Chiba Tokyo Institute of Technology Japan Ruzanna Chitchyan University of Lancaster UK Angelina Espinoza Technical University of Madrid Spain Ira Forman IBM Austin US Paolo Giarrusso Philipps-Universitat Marburg Germany Rosario Giunta University of Catania Italy Stefan Hanenberg University of Duisburg-Essen Germany Robert Hirschfeld Hasso-Plattner-Institute Germany Maciej Koutny University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne UK Hidehiko Masuhara University of Tokyo Japan Giuseppe Pappalardo University of Catania Italy Eric Tanter University of Chile Chile Didier Verna EPITA R&D Lab France Valter Vieira de Camargo Federal University of São Carlos Brazil |
Complex systems are intrinsically expensive to develop because several
concerns must be addressed simultaneously. Once the development phase is
over, these systems are often hard to reuse and evolve because their
concerns are intertwined and making apparently small changes force
programmers to modify many parts. Moreover, legacy systems are difficult
to evolve due to additional problems, including: lack of a well defined
architecture, use of several programming languages and paradigms, etc.
Goal The Programming for Separation of
Concerns (PSC) track at the 2012 Symposium on Applied Computing (SAC)
aims to bring together researchers to share experiences in using SoC
techniques, and explore the practical problems of existing tools,
environments, etc. The track will address questions like: Can
performance degradation be limited? Are unexpected changes dealt with
by reflective or aspect-oriented systems? Is there any experience of
long term evolution that shows a higher degree of flexibility of
systems developed with such techniques? How such techniques cope with
architectural erosion? Are these techniques helpful to deal with
evolution of legacy systems?
Original papers from the above mentioned or other related areas will be
considered. Only full papers about original and unpublished
research are sought. Parallel submission to other conferences or
tracks is not acceptable. |
ACM SAC Programming for Separation of
Concerns 2012 |