‹Programming› 2018
Mon 9 - Thu 12 April 2018 Nice, France
Tue 10 Apr 2018 17:30 - 18:00 at Baie des Anges B - Programming and Applications Chair(s): Kazutaka Matsuda

Model-driven development aims to enable the separation of concerns in software development, by allowing different people to work with different models which are automatically reconciled, eventually all contributing to running software. A key motivator for studying bidirectional transformation is the recognition that these models may not naturally fall into a strict hierarchy: rather, the information in them typically overlaps. Recently, the Bx community has started to pay more attention to situations involving more than two models that must be bidirectionally related. A megamodel can specify what models exist and the relationships between them. Among the MDD problems that are not yet fully solved is how to manage the process of reconciling the models, and ultimately building software, especially given that inconsistencies between models may need to be resolved by different means under different circumstances; for example, a bidirectional transformation may need to be applied in one direction or the other. A distinct but related problem is how to build software from a collection of artefacts such as source code files. Here a key challenge is to marry correctness (a successful build always incorporates the latest versions of relevant artefacts) with efficiency (no unnecessary rebuild steps or checks).

This talk describes ongoing work bringing recent advances in provably correct and optimal build systems to bear on the problem of building software from a collection of many bidirectionally-related models described by a megamodel.

Tue 10 Apr

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16:30 - 18:10
Programming and ApplicationsBx at Baie des Anges B
Chair(s): Kazutaka Matsuda Tohoku University
16:30
30m
Talk
An Axiomatic Basis for Bidirectional Programming
Bx
Hsiang-Shang ‘Josh’ Ko National Institute of Informatics, Japan, Zhenjiang Hu National Institute of Informatics
Link to publication DOI
17:00
30m
Talk
Profunctor Optics and the Yoneda Lemma
Bx
Jeremy Gibbons Department of Computer Science, University of Oxford, Guillaume Boisseau
17:30
30m
Talk
Towards sound, flexible and optimal build for megamodels
Bx
Perdita Stevens University of Edinburgh
18:00
10m
Day closing
Closing
Bx