Ralf Lämmel and Eelco Visser and Joost Visser.
Strategic Programming Meets Adaptive Programming. In
Proceedings of Aspect-Oriented Software Development (AOSD'03). pages 168-177.
ACM Press, Boston, USA, March 2003. (
pdf,
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Abstract
Strategic programming is a generic programming idiom for processing compound data such as terms or object structures. At the heart of the approach is the separation of two concerns: basic data-processing computations vs. traversal schemes. Actual traversals can be composed by passing the former as arguments to the latter. Traversal schemes can be defined by the strategic programmer using a combinator style that relies on primitives for layered traversal.
In this paper, we adopt an aspect-oriented view on strategic programming. This necessitates the instantiation of aspect-oriented terms such as crosscutting, join point, and advice. More specifically, we compare strategic programming with adaptive programming, which is a well-established aspectual approach to the traversal of object structures.
Bibtex
@InProceedings{LVV03,
author = {Ralf Lämmel and Eelco Visser and Joost Visser},
title = {Strategic Programming Meets Adaptive Programming},
booktitle = {Proceedings of Aspect-Oriented Software Development (AOSD'03)},
year = {2003},
month = {March},
publisher = {ACM Press},
pages = {168-177},
address = {Boston, USA},
url = {http://www.program-transformation.org/Transform/StrategicProgrammingMeetsAdaptiveProgramming},
}
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