Abstract. Message Sequence Charts (MSC) have traditionally been used as a weak form of behavioral requirements in software design; they denote scenarios which may happen. Live Sequence Charts (LSC) ex-tend Message Sequence Charts by also allowing the designer to specify scenarios which must happen. Live Sequence Chart specifications are executable; their simulation allows the designer to play out potentially aberrant scenarios prior to software construction. In this paper, we pro-pose the use of Constraint Logic Programming (CLP) for symbolic exe-cution of requirements described as Live Sequence Charts. The utility of CLP stems from its ability to execute in the presence of uninstantiated variables. This allows us to simulate multiple scena...
The design of an embedded control system starts with an investigation of properties and behaviors of...
Abstract—Scenario-based specifications such as Message Sequence Charts (MSCs) are useful as part of ...
Message Sequence Charts (MSCs) are a widely used visual formalism for scenario-based specifications ...
AbstractThis paper describes light-weight formal techniques based on Message Sequence Charts (MSCs) ...
Abstract. Message Sequence Charts (MSCs) are an appealing visual formalism that play a useful role i...
Message Sequence Charts (MSCs) are increasingly supported in software engineering tools to capture s...
Capturing a requirement is a great challenge in the initial stages of the software development, be i...
In the article ”From Play-In Scenarios to Code: An Achievable Dream” [8] D.Harel outlines an exiting...
Abstract. We provide semantics for the powerful scenario-based language of live sequence charts (LSC...
. Scenario-based specifications such as message sequence charts (MSC) offer an intuitive and visual ...
Interaction scenarios are commonly used in capturing and modelling system requirements of distribute...
Message Sequence Charts (MSCs) are a widely used scenario notation. However, we believe that this la...
Software designers draw Message Sequence Charts for early modeling of the individual behaviors they ...
: While message sequence charts (MSCs) are widely used in industry to document the interworking of p...
Scenario-based specifications such as Message Sequence Charts (MSCs) are becoming increasingly popul...
The design of an embedded control system starts with an investigation of properties and behaviors of...
Abstract—Scenario-based specifications such as Message Sequence Charts (MSCs) are useful as part of ...
Message Sequence Charts (MSCs) are a widely used visual formalism for scenario-based specifications ...
AbstractThis paper describes light-weight formal techniques based on Message Sequence Charts (MSCs) ...
Abstract. Message Sequence Charts (MSCs) are an appealing visual formalism that play a useful role i...
Message Sequence Charts (MSCs) are increasingly supported in software engineering tools to capture s...
Capturing a requirement is a great challenge in the initial stages of the software development, be i...
In the article ”From Play-In Scenarios to Code: An Achievable Dream” [8] D.Harel outlines an exiting...
Abstract. We provide semantics for the powerful scenario-based language of live sequence charts (LSC...
. Scenario-based specifications such as message sequence charts (MSC) offer an intuitive and visual ...
Interaction scenarios are commonly used in capturing and modelling system requirements of distribute...
Message Sequence Charts (MSCs) are a widely used scenario notation. However, we believe that this la...
Software designers draw Message Sequence Charts for early modeling of the individual behaviors they ...
: While message sequence charts (MSCs) are widely used in industry to document the interworking of p...
Scenario-based specifications such as Message Sequence Charts (MSCs) are becoming increasingly popul...
The design of an embedded control system starts with an investigation of properties and behaviors of...
Abstract—Scenario-based specifications such as Message Sequence Charts (MSCs) are useful as part of ...
Message Sequence Charts (MSCs) are a widely used visual formalism for scenario-based specifications ...