E-Book, Englisch, Band 298, 286 Seiten, eBook
Reihe: The Springer International Series in Engineering and Computer Science
Reiss The Field Programming Environment: A Friendly Integrated Environment for Learning and Development
Erscheinungsjahr 2012
ISBN: 978-1-4615-2215-7
Verlag: Springer US
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 1 - PDF Watermark
E-Book, Englisch, Band 298, 286 Seiten, eBook
Reihe: The Springer International Series in Engineering and Computer Science
ISBN: 978-1-4615-2215-7
Verlag: Springer US
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 1 - PDF Watermark
Zielgruppe
Research
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
1 Integrated Programming Environments.- 1.1 What Is a Programming Environments.- 1.2 Classification of Environments.- 1.3 Objectives in Building Field.- 1.4 Integration Strategies.- 1.5 Overview of the Field Environment.- 2 The FIELD Integration Mechanism.- 2.1 The Message System.- 2.2 Pattern Matching.- 2.3 Message Types.- 2.4 Message Groups.- 2.5 Other Message Facilities.- 2.6 The Msg Program Interface.- 2.7 Comparison To Other Implementations.- 3 The FIELD Policy Service.- 3.1 The Policy Concept.- 3.2 Policy Language Concepts.- 3.3 Sample Policy Programs.- 4 The FIELD Debugger.- 4.1 Overall Debugger Organization.- 4.2 The Message Interface.- 4.3 Messages Generated by the Debugger.- 4.4 The Textual Command Language.- 5 Cross-Referencing in FIELD.- 5.1 The Overall Approach.- 5.2 The Cross-Reference Database System.- 5.3 The Cross-Reference Scanners.- 5.4 The Cross-Reference Server.- 6 FIELD Services.- 6.1 Configuration and Version Control.- 6.2 Program Profiling.- 6.3 Execution Monitoring.- 7 The Brown Workstation Environment.- 7.1 History of Bwe.- 7.2 Basic Bwe Components.- 7.3 Structured Graphics Display.- 7.4 Resource Management.- 8 The Annotation Editor.- 8.1 Annotations.- 8.2 Integrating Annotations and Messages.- 8.3 Permanent Annotations.- 8.4 Annotation Editor Interface.- 9 The Debugger Interface.- 9.1 Overview.- 9.2 DBG.- 9.3 Viewers of Debugger Information.- 9.4 The User Input-Output Viewer.- 10 The Interface for Cross-Referencing.- 10.1 Defining Standard Queries.- 10..2 Query Processing.- 10.3 Interacting with Other Tools.- 11 The Call Graph Browser.- 11.1 Organizing the Data.- 11.2 Browsing Options.- 11.3 Information Window.- 11.4 Animating the Call Graph.- 11.5 Interacting with the Environment.- 12 The Class Hierarchy Browser.- 12.1 What to Display.- 12.2Displaying Large Hierarchies.- 12.3 Class and Member Information.- 12.4 Interacting with the Class Browser.- 13 The Interface to UNIX Profiling Tools.- 13.1 Displaying the Performance Data.- 13.2 Interacting with Xprof.- 14 Configuration and Version Management.- 14.1 Obtaining the Information.- 14.2 Displaying the Dependency Graph.- 14.3 Browsing Options and Commands.- 14.4 Interacting with Other Tools.- 15 Data Structure Display.- 15.1 Getting the Information.- 15.2 Default Display Definitions.- 15.3 User-Defined Display Definitions.- 15.3.1 The APPLE Editor.- 15.3.2 The APPLE User Interface.- 15.4 Examples of Mapping Definitions.- 15.5 Editing Data Structures Graphically.- 16 Monitoring Program Execution.- 16.1 Heap Visualization.- 16.2 Input/Output Visualization.- 16.3 Performance Visualization.- 17 The Control Panel.- 17.1 Defining the Control Panel.- 17.2 Window Management.- 17.3 Common Utilities.- 17.4 Standard Button Commands.- 18 Retrospective.- 18.1 Messaging.- 18.2 General Structure.- 18.3 Graphical Interfaces.- 18.4 Editing.- 18.5 Debugging.- 18.6 Program Database.- 18.7 Experience with the Environment.- 18.8 Conclusion.