DocumentCode
798389
Title
Reusing software: issues and research directions
Author
Mili, Hafedh ; Mili, Fatma ; Mili, Ali
Author_Institution
Dept. d´´Inf., Quebec Univ., Montreal, Que., Canada
Volume
21
Issue
6
fYear
1995
fDate
6/1/1995 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
528
Lastpage
562
Abstract
Software productivity has been steadily increasing over the past 30 years, but not enough to close the gap between the demands placed on the software industry and what the state of the practice can deliver; nothing short of an order of magnitude increase in productivity will extricate the software industry from its perennial crisis. Several decades of intensive research in software engineering and artificial intelligence left few alternatives but software reuse as the (only) realistic approach to bring about the gains of productivity and quality that the software industry needs. In this paper, we discuss the implications of reuse on the production, with an emphasis on the technical challenges. Software reuse involves building software that is reusable by design and building with reusable software. Software reuse includes reusing both the products of previous software projects and the processes deployed to produce them, leading to a wide spectrum of reuse approaches, from the building blocks (reusing products) approach, on one hand, to the generative or reusable processor (reusing processes), on the other. We discuss the implication of such approaches on the organization, control, and method of software development and discuss proposed models for their economic analysis. Software reuse benefits from methodologies and tools to: (1) build more readily reusable software and (2) locate, evaluate, and tailor reusable software, the last being critical for the building blocks approach. Both sets of issues are discussed in this paper, with a focus on application generators and OO development for the first and a thorough discussion of retrieval techniques for software components, component composition (or bottom-up design), and transformational systems for the second. We conclude by highlighting areas that, in our opinion, are worthy of further investigation
Keywords
object-oriented programming; software reusability; building blocks approach; managerial aspects; reusable components; reusable processor; reusable software; software component retrieval; software engineering; software productivity; software reuse measurements; technical challenges; Artificial intelligence; Buildings; Computer industry; Production; Productivity; Programming; Software engineering; Software quality; Software reusability; Software tools;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Software Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0098-5589
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/32.391379
Filename
391379
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