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Conference paper

A Cloverleaf of Software Engineering

From

Department of Informatics and Mathematical Modeling, Technical University of Denmark1

We shall touch upon four issues of software engineering (SE): domain engineering, formal techniques, SE sociology, and academic software architects. First, before software can be designed one must understand its requirements; but before requirements can be formulated one must understand the domain. So we assume that requirements development is based on first having established models of the (application) domain.

We illustrate facets of the railway domain. Second, we touch upon all of the three phases: domain engineering, requirements engineering and software design also being done formally, however "lite". Third, despite 35 years of formal methods, the SE industry, maturity-wise still lags far behind that of other engineering disciplines.

So we examine why. Finally, in several areas, in health care, in architecture, and others, we see that major undertakings are primarily spearheaded by senior academic staff. Professors of medicine daily perform specialized surgery and treatments at hospitals. Professors of architecture design new, daring buildings for industry, and professors of civil engineering head the engineering structural design of new, daring bridges.

So we speculate what a similar approach would entail for SE. The paper is provocative, it postulates, but most claims are not (but can and will be) substantiated.

Language: English
Publisher: IEEE
Year: 2005
Pages: 75-85
Proceedings: Third IEEE International Conference on Software Engineering and Formal Methods
ISBN: 0769524354 and 9780769524351
ISSN: 21607656 and 15510255
Types: Conference paper
DOI: 10.1109/SEFM.2005.2

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