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Applied Metamodelling: A Foundation for Language Driven Development

Applied Metamodelling: A Foundation for Language Driven Development (2004)
by Tony Clark, Paul Sammut, James Willans

An excerpt:

Language-driven development is fundamentally based on the ability to rapidly design new languages and tools in a unified and interoperable manner. We argue that existing technologies do not provide this capability, but a language engineering approach based on metamodelling can. The detailed study of metamodelling and how it can realise the Language-Driven Development vision will form the focus for the remainder of this book.

In software engineering circles the term "language driven development" is synonymous with "language oriented programming", a term which LtU members are more familiar with (thanks to Martin Ward's article Language Oriented Programming which first appeared in 1994, and then Martin Fowler's essays on the topic). The book hasn't appeared on the radar here on LtU, despite 41 citations. I suspect this is due in part to only one citation at Citeseer, and the lack of cross-talk between computer scientists and software engineers.

There are a lot of similarities between the XMF language (discussion at LtU) and that of the Katahdin language (discussion at LtU). Other related discussions here at LtU, include Language Workbenches: The Killer App for DSLs - about the essay by Martin Fowler, Ralph Johnson: Language workbenches - a response to Fowler's essay, XActium - Lightweight Language Engineering? - which discusses an essay about a previous version of XMF, Generating Interpreters? , Language Oriented Programming - discusses an essay by Jetbrain's Sergey Dmitriev, "Language Oriented Programming" Meta Programming System - discussion of the Jetbrain MPS system, The DSL, MDA, UML thing again... - an older discussion on the relationship between DSLs and MDA.

(Disclaimer: Some may notice that I am mentioned on the XMF web site, but this is just because I subjected their XMF language to a number of grueling challenges which they passed with flying colors: see the language snippets in the documentation. I have no affiliation with their company.)