By definition, automated software engineering needs the support of automation tools, in order to be effective. Many tools have been developed to support automation, in both narrow and broad domains. These range across AI toolkits, theorem provers and model checkers; requirements, design, coding and testing support tools; various configuration management, process enactment and project management support tools; and code generators, code analysis, visualisation, refactoring and reverse engineering tools. After re-revision of nearly a dozen papers, we accepted 9 papers for the special issue, the first four of which appear in this issue of the ASE journal.
%0 Journal Article
%1 GrundyHosking13ase1
%A Grundy, John
%A Hosking, John
%D 2013
%J Automated Software Engineering
%K 01624 springer paper software engineering development code generation tool
%N 2
%P 137--139
%R 10.1007/s10515-013-0121-3
%T Guest Editors Introduction: Special Issue on Innovative Automated Software Engineering Tools, Part One
%V 20
%X By definition, automated software engineering needs the support of automation tools, in order to be effective. Many tools have been developed to support automation, in both narrow and broad domains. These range across AI toolkits, theorem provers and model checkers; requirements, design, coding and testing support tools; various configuration management, process enactment and project management support tools; and code generators, code analysis, visualisation, refactoring and reverse engineering tools. After re-revision of nearly a dozen papers, we accepted 9 papers for the special issue, the first four of which appear in this issue of the ASE journal.
@article{GrundyHosking13ase1,
abstract = {By definition, automated software engineering needs the support of automation tools, in order to be effective. Many tools have been developed to support automation, in both narrow and broad domains. These range across AI toolkits, theorem provers and model checkers; requirements, design, coding and testing support tools; various configuration management, process enactment and project management support tools; and code generators, code analysis, visualisation, refactoring and reverse engineering tools. After re-revision of nearly a dozen papers, we accepted 9 papers for the special issue, the first four of which appear in this issue of the ASE journal.},
added-at = {2017-06-17T10:30:43.000+0200},
author = {Grundy, John and Hosking, John},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2333cc2c53be1016bbf3c7337b5618c6e/flint63},
doi = {10.1007/s10515-013-0121-3},
file = {SpringerLink:2013/GrundyHosking13ase1.pdf:PDF},
groups = {public},
interhash = {ee29ed34d4cf0a2317ba88e5c8d44083},
intrahash = {333cc2c53be1016bbf3c7337b5618c6e},
issn = {0928-8910},
journal = {Automated Software Engineering},
keywords = {01624 springer paper software engineering development code generation tool},
month = {#jun#},
number = 2,
pages = {137--139},
timestamp = {2017-07-13T18:05:39.000+0200},
title = {Guest Editors Introduction: Special Issue on Innovative Automated Software Engineering Tools, Part One},
username = {flint63},
volume = 20,
year = 2013
}