The Impact of Software Engineering Research on Modern Programming Languages
| Venue: | ACM Transactions on Software Engineering and Methodology |
| Citations: | 6 - 1 self |
BibTeX
@ARTICLE{Ryder_theimpact,
author = {Barbara G. Ryder and Mary Lou Soffa and Margaret Burnett},
title = {The Impact of Software Engineering Research on Modern Programming Languages},
journal = {ACM Transactions on Software Engineering and Methodology},
year = {},
pages = {2005}
}
OpenURL
Abstract
Software engineering research and programming language design have enjoyed a symbiotic relationship, with traceable impacts since the 1970s, when these areas were first distinguished from one another. This report documents this relationship by focusing on several major features of current programming languages: data and procedural abstraction, types, concurrency, exceptions, and visual programming mechanisms. The influences are determined by tracing references in publications in both fields, obtaining oral histories from language designers delineating influences on them, and tracking cotemporal research trends and ideas as demonstrated by workshop topics, special issue publications, and invited talks in the two fields. In some cases there is conclusive This article has been developed under the auspices of the Impact Project. The aim of the project is to provide a scholarly study of the impact that software engineering research—both academic and industrial—has had upon practice. The principal output of the project is a series of individual papers covering the impact upon practice of research in several selected major areas of software







