Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 104
pro vyhledávání: '"Walter Cazzola"'
Publikováno v:
Distributed Computing. 35:439-454
The Erlang programming language is used to build concurrent, distributed, scalable and resilient systems. Every component of these systems has to be thoroughly tested not only for correctness, but also for performance. Performance analysis tools in t
Experimental dataset and the scripts needed to run the experiment described in the paper: Francesco Bertolotti, Walter Cazzola and Luca Favalli, “SP⅃LꟼƧ : Software Product Lines Extraction Driven by Language Server Protocol” Currently under
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::e0dcbe1dad22a5aa021a2d9d094d2390
Publikováno v:
Journal of Systems and Software. 202:111704
Autor:
Walter Cazzola, Luca Favalli
Experimental dataset and the scripts needed to run the experiment described in the paper: Walter Cazzola and Luca Favalli, “The Language Mutation Problem: Leveraging Language Product Lines for Mutation Testing of Interpreters” Published in the Jo
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::b7f0dffa6ba0015eea52427874992463
Bridging the model-to-code abstraction gap with fuzzy logic in model-based regression test selection
Publikováno v:
Software and Systems Modeling. 21:207-224
Regression test selection (RTS) approaches reduce the cost of regression testing of evolving software systems. Existing RTS approaches based on UML models use behavioral diagrams or a combination of structural and behavioral diagrams. However, in pra
Autor:
Walter Cazzola, Luca Favalli
Publikováno v:
Empirical Software Engineering. 27
Autor:
Walter Cazzola, Luca Favalli
Publikováno v:
Empirical Software Engineering. 27
Programming languages are complex systems that are usually implemented as monolithic interpreters and compilers. In recent years, researchers and practitioners gained interest in product line engineering to improve the reusability of language assets
Publikováno v:
SPLC (A)
Language development is inherently complex. With the support of a suitable language development environment most computer scientists could develop their own domain-specific language (DSL) with relative ease. Yet, when the DSL is the result of a confi
Publikováno v:
Computer Languages, Systems & Structures. 51:71-89
Today software systems play a critical role in society’s infrastructures and many are required to provide uninterrupted services in their constantly changing environments. As the problem domain and the operational context of such software changes,