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TRIAD: beyond isolated systems for development-in-the-large and programming-in-the-small

Published: 01 October 1985 Publication History

Abstract

The following begins with a survey of current concerns in managing information and current shortcomings of various approaches to address these concerns. It is provided as the basis of the TRIAD research project. The TRIAD project has resulted in the specification and implementation of the mechanisms needed to build intelligent interfaces. It by no means attempts to model a single process, rather, TRIAD is a synthesis of AI, operating system, and software engineering techniques which allows any process to be modeled. TRIAD does not duplicate the functionality of existing software, it does, however, provide a uniform interface so that other software tools can communicate with the database and each other.

References

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1. Barstow, D. R. Programming Language Series. Volume : Knowledge-Based Program Construction. North Holland, New York, New York, 1979.
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2. Date, C. J. The System Programming Series. Volume : An Introduction to Database Systems. Addison Wesley, Reading, Mass., 1977.
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3. Liskov, B. and S. Zilles. An Introduction to Formal Specifications of Data Abstraction. In Raymond T. Yeh, Ed., Current Trends in Programming Methodology, Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, 1977, Chap. 1, pp. 1-32.
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4. G. W. Radley. Management Information Systems. International Textbook Company Limited, 24 Market Square, Aylesbury, Bucks HP20 1TL, 1973.
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5. Rich, Charles. Inspection Methods in Programming. AI-TR-604, Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, 545 Technology Square, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139, Jan, 1981.
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6. Gerald J. Skibbins. Organizational Evolution, A Program for Managing Radical Change. AMACOM, American Management Associations, New York, 1974.
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7. Teitelbaum, T., T. Reps, and S. Horowitz. "The Why and Wherefore of the Cornell Program Synthesizer". SIGPLAN Notices 16, 6 (June 1981), 8-16.
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9. Winograd, Terry. "Beyond Programming Languages". Communication of the ACM 22, 7 (July 1979), 391-410.

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Information & Contributors

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Published In

cover image ACM SIGSOFT Software Engineering Notes
ACM SIGSOFT Software Engineering Notes  Volume 10, Issue 5
Oct. 1985
84 pages
ISSN:0163-5948
DOI:10.1145/382288
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Association for Computing Machinery

New York, NY, United States

Publication History

Published: 01 October 1985
Published in SIGSOFT Volume 10, Issue 5

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