scholarly journals A Survey of Model Driven Engineering Tools for User Interface Design

Author(s):  
Jorge-Luis Pérez-Medina ◽  
Sophie Dupuy-Chessa ◽  
Agnès Front
Author(s):  
Sybille Caffiau ◽  
Patrick Girard

In user interface design, model-driven approaches usually involve generative solutions, producing interface by successive transformations of a set of initial models. These approaches have obvious limitations, especially for advanced user interfaces. Moreover, top-down design approaches (as generative approaches are) are not appropriate for interactive application development in which users need to be included in the whole design process. Based on strong associations between task models and dialogue models, the authors propose a global process, which facilitates the design of interactive applications conforming to their models, including a rule-checking step. This process permits either to start from a task model or a user-defined prototype. In any case, it allows an iterative development, including iterative user modifications, in line with user-centered design standards.


Formalization approaches of user interface design (UID) in conjunction with model driven techniques aim to improve the usability in terms of conformity to standards or style guides and to leverage code generation of interactive software systems, so that various UI platforms for web, desktop or mobile Applications are supported. Because large parts of the UI are described platform independent instead of platform dependent implementations, re-usability of the UI concept is also improved. However, UI formalization requires the usage of a formal UI description language and a higher level of abstractness compared to concrete UI code. These languages need to be learned by the UI designer. In practice, most parts of a user interface are still manually designed and coded individually for every platform. This paper describes how HCI (Human Computer Interface) patterns that are described formally can be used in conjunction with model-based user interface design in order to make it easier for the designer to use formalization techniques for the development of user interfaces. The approach uses two UML profiles: The MBUID (Model-Based User Interface Design) profile and the HCI pattern profile. With these profiles formal models of interactive systems can be created on a platform independent level. The user interface is then automatically generated by model-driven development tool chain.


2014 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 93-105
Author(s):  
Sri Ravana ◽  
◽  
Niesha Gurusamy ◽  
Kasturi Varathan

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