A requirements metamodel for rich internet applications

By: Contributor(s): Material type: ArticleArticleDescription: 1 archivo (398 KB)Subject(s): Online resources: Summary: The evolution of the Web has motivated the development of several Web design approaches to support the systematic building of Web software. Together with the constant technological advances, these methods must be constantly improved to deal with a myriad of new feasible application features. In this paper we fo- cus on the field of Rich Internet Applications (RIA); specifically we aim to offer a solution for the treatment of Web Requirements in RIA development. For this aim we present WebRE+, a requirements metamodel which incorporates RIA features into the modelling repertoire. We illustrate our ideas with a meaningful example of a business intelligence application.
Star ratings
    Average rating: 0.0 (0 votes)
Holdings
Item type Home library Collection Call number URL Status Date due Barcode
Capítulo de libro Capítulo de libro Biblioteca de la Facultad de Informática Biblioteca digital A0360 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Link to resource No corresponde

Formato de archivo: PDF. -- Este documento es producción intelectual de la Facultad de Informática - UNLP (Colección BIPA/Biblioteca)

The evolution of the Web has motivated the development of several Web design approaches to support the systematic building of Web software. Together with the constant technological advances, these methods must be constantly improved to deal with a myriad of new feasible application features. In this paper we fo- cus on the field of Rich Internet Applications (RIA); specifically we aim to offer a solution for the treatment of Web Requirements in RIA development. For this aim we present WebRE+, a requirements metamodel which incorporates RIA features into the modelling repertoire. We illustrate our ideas with a meaningful example of a business intelligence application.

International Conference on Software and Data Technologies (5a : 2010 jul. 22-24 : Atenas). Proceedings, vol. 2, pp. 14-21