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The Bauhaus project is a software research project collaboration among the University of Stuttgart, the University of Bremen, and a commercial spin-off company Axivion formerly called Bauhaus Software Technologies. The Bauhaus project serves the fields of software maintenance and software reengineering. Created in response to the problem of software rot,〔Holger Bruns. "(Rolle rückwärts: 'Reverse Engineering' deckt Schwachstellen in der Softwarentwicklung auf )." ''Deutschlandfunk'' (Radio Germany). 08.07.2006.〕 the project aims to analyze and recover the means and methods developed for legacy software by understanding the software's architecture.〔Tullio Vardanega. ''(Reliable software technology - Ada-Europe 2005:10th Ada-Europe International Conference on Reliable Software Technologies, York, UK, June 20 - 24, 2005, proceedings )''. Volume 3555 of Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Springer, 2005. ISBN 3-540-26286-5, ISBN 978-3-540-26286-2〕 As part of its research, the project develops software tools (such as the Bauhaus Toolkit) for software architecture, software maintenance and reengineering and program understanding.〔Quigley, Aaron J. ''(Large Scale Relational Information Visualization, Clustering, and Abstraction )'', pp. 155-159. Doctoral dissertation. Department of Computer Science and Software Engineering, University of Newcastle, August, 2001.〕 The project derives its name from the former Bauhaus art school.〔(The Bauhaus Project )〕 ==History== The Bauhaus project was initiated by Erhard Ploedereder, Ph.D.〔"(Biographies )." 5th IFIP Summer School on Software Technology and the Warm Up Workshop for ACM/IEEE ICSE 2010〕 and Rainer Koschke, Ph.D. at the University of Stuttgart〔(Keynote Speakers - WCRE 2005 ) Working Conference on Reverse Engineering〕 in 1996. It was originally a collaboration between the Institute for Computer Science (ICS) of the University of Stuttgart and the Fraunhofer-Institut für Experimentelles Software Engineering (IESE),〔〔 which is no longer involved. Early versions of Bauhaus integrated and used Rigi for visualization. The commercial spin-off Axivion was started in 2005.〔Jochen Quante. ''(Dynamic Object Process Graphs )'' (Dissertation) Universität Bremen. 30 January 2009〕 Today, the research is done at Axivion, the Institute of Software Technology, Department of Programming Languages at the University of Stuttgart as well as at the Software Engineering Group of the Faculty 03 at the University of Bremen. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Bauhaus Project (computing)」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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