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E-raamat: Languages for Developing User Interfaces

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  • Formaat: 480 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 02-Nov-1992
  • Kirjastus: Jones and Bartlett Publishers, Inc
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781439865439
  • Formaat - PDF+DRM
  • Hind: 74,09 €*
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  • Formaat: 480 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 02-Nov-1992
  • Kirjastus: Jones and Bartlett Publishers, Inc
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781439865439

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Contributors to a workshop held at the SIGCHI conference in New Orleans in May 1991, discuss what types of computer languages would be appropriate in the future and the features of those languages. The workshop reports constitute only a small portion of the volume; most of the presentation consists of well-organized summaries of various aspects of programming languages for end users, and for programmers. Annotation copyright Book News, Inc. Portland, Or.

This book brings together a number of researchers and developers from industry and academia who report on their work. It is of interest to language designers and the creators of toolkits, UIMSs, and other user interface tools.
Introduction Part I: Programming Languages for End Users
1. The User
Interface is the Language
2. A Component Architecture for Personal Computer
Software
3. Design Support Environments for End Users
4. The Use-Mention
Perspective on Programming for the Interface
5. Why the User Interface is Not
the Programming Language-and How It Can Be Part II: Programming Languages for
Programmers
6. How Programming Languages Might Better Support User Interface
Tools
7. Requirements for User Interface Programming Languages
8. Languages
for the Construction of Multi-User Multi-Media Synchronous (MUMMS)
Applications
9. Ideas from Garnet for Future User Interface Programming
Languages
10. Constraint Imperative Programming Languages for Building
Interactive Systems
11. An Active-Value-Spreadsheet Model for Interactive
Languages
12. Properties of User Interface Systems and the Siri Programming
Language
13. A Foundation for User Interface Construction
14. User Interface
Programming with Cooperative Processes
15. Constructing User Interfaces with
Functions and Temporal Constraints
16. Different Languages for Different
Development Activities: Behavioral Representation Techniques for User
Interface Design
17. Hints on the Design of User Interface Language
FeaturesLessons from the Design of Thring Part III: Workshop Reports
18.
Report of the "End-User Programming" Working Group
19. Report of the
"User/Programmer Distinction" Working Group
20. Report of the "Linguistic
Support" Working Group
21. Future Research Issues in Languages for Developing
User Interfaces
Myers\, Brad A.