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Comparing general-purpose and domain-specific languages: An empirical study
Author(s) -
Tomaž Kosar,
Nuno Oliveira,
Marjan Mernik,
Maria João Varanda Pereira,
Matej Črepinšek,
Cruz da,
Pedro Rangel Henriques
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
computer science and information systems
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.244
H-Index - 24
eISSN - 2406-1018
pISSN - 1820-0214
DOI - 10.2298/csis1002247k
Subject(s) - computer science , domain (mathematical analysis) , domain specific language , dimension (graph theory) , cognitive dimensions of notations , programming language , work (physics) , software engineering , human–computer interaction , artificial intelligence , cognition , engineering , biology , mechanical engineering , mathematical analysis , mathematics , neuroscience , pure mathematics
Many domain-specific languages, that try to bring feasible alternatives for existing solutions while simplifying programming work, have come up in recent years. Although, these little languages seem to be easy to use, there is an open issue whether they bring advantages in comparison to the application libraries, which are the most commonly used implementation approach. In this work, we present an experiment, which was carried out to compare such a domain-specific language with a comparable application library. The experimentwas conducted with 36 programmers, who have answered a questionnaireon both implementation approaches. The questionnaire is more than100 pages long. For a domain-specific language and the application library, the same problem domain has been used - construction of graphical user interfaces. In terms of a domain-specific language, XAML has been used and C# Forms for the application library. A cognitive dimension framework has been used for a comparison between XAML and C# Forms

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