scholarly journals A Domain Specific Language to Simplify the Creation of Large Scale Federated Model Sets

Author(s):  
Zachary T. Reinhart ◽  
Sunil Suram ◽  
Kenneth M. Bryden
2013 ◽  
Vol 78 (6) ◽  
pp. 657-681 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mathieu Acher ◽  
Philippe Collet ◽  
Philippe Lahire ◽  
Robert B. France

2019 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 32-69 ◽  
Author(s):  
Esra’ M. Abdelzaher

This study adopts a lexicon-based approach to address violence on social media. It uses FrameNet 1.7 (fn) and WordNet 3.1 (wn) to build a hierarchical domain-specific language resource of violence. The proposed lexicon tethers fn’s innovative integration of linguistic and paralinguistic knowledge to wn’s hierarchically-organized database. This tether alleviates the need to gather all paralinguistic violence-associated scenes and organize their linguistic realizations hierarchically. The proposed methodology can be internationally applied, given the multilingual availability of fn and wn, to cognitively and quantitatively explore a concept or a phenomenon. The lexicon is applied, then, to a corpus representing posts and comments retrieved from Donald Trump’s Facebook public page. Results reveal that the proposed lexicon recalls 92.68 of the total violence-related words in the corpus with a 76.31 precision (F-score= 83.7). More important, relating wn to fn inspires the creation of new frames, suggests slight modifications to existing ones and advocates promising mapping between some frames and synsets.


2010 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vinícius Durelli ◽  
Rafael Durelli ◽  
Simone De Sousa Borges ◽  
Rosana Braga

GRENJ is a white-box framework implemented in Java. White-box frameworks are reusable designs composed of a set of concrete and abstract classes so that the collaboration among these classes provides support for large-scale reuse of design and source code. However, instantiating applications by using this sort of framework is quite complex and demands detailed architectural knowledge. In order to lessen the amount of source code, effort, and expertise required to instantiate applications by using GRENJ framework, we have developed a domain specific language that manages all application instantiation issues systematically. This domain specific language facilitates the application instantiation process by acting as a facade over GRENJ framework as well as providing the user with a more concise, human-readable syntax than Java. In this paper, we contrast the major differences and benefits resulting from instantiating applications solely using GRENJ framework and indirectly reusing its source code by applying our domain specific language.


Author(s):  
Alberto Simões ◽  
Rui Miguel da Costa Meira

This chapter describes an approach for the implementation of embedded domain-specific languages by using operator overloads and the creation of abstract syntax trees in run-time. Using the host language parser, an AST is created stating the structure of the DSL expression that is later analyzed, simplified, and optimized before the evaluation step. For the illustration of this process, the chapter proposes a domain-specific language for a basic linear algebra system dealing with matrices algebra and its optimization.


Author(s):  
Jessica Ray ◽  
Ajav Brahmakshatriya ◽  
Richard Wang ◽  
Shoaib Kamil ◽  
Albert Reuther ◽  
...  

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