Publication | Closed Access
Using style to understand descriptions of software architecture
184
Citations
7
References
1993
Year
Architectural DesignConventionalized InterpretationsSoftware Architecture ModelingEngineeringProgram AnalysisSoftware ArchitectureDesignArchitecture Description LanguageFormal MethodsArchitectural StylesSoftware EngineeringSocial SciencesSemanticsArchitecture SpecificationSoftware AnalysisSystem SoftwareSoftware DesignSystem Architecture
The software architecture of most systems is described informally and diagrammatically. In order for these descriptions to be meaningful at all, figures are understood by interpreting the boxes and lines in specific, conventionalized ways[5]. The imprecision of these interpretations has a number of limitations. In this paper we consider these conventionalized interpretations as architectural styles and provide a formal framework for their uniform definition. In addition to providing a template for precisely defining new architectural styles, this framework allows for the proof that the notational constraints on a style are sufficient to guarantee the meanings of all described systems and provides a unified semantic base through which different stylistic interpretations can be compared.
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