A Calculus for Boxes and Traits in a Java-Like Setting - Coordination Models and Languages
Conference Papers Year : 2010

A Calculus for Boxes and Traits in a Java-Like Setting

Abstract

The box model is a component model for the object-oriented paradigm, that defines components (the boxes) with clear encapsulation boundaries. Having well-defined boundaries is crucial in component-based software development, because it enables to argue about the interference and interaction between a component and its context. In general, boxes contain several objects and inner boxes, of which some are local to the box and cannot be accessed from other boxes and some can be accessible by other boxes. A trait is a set of methods divorced from any class hierarchy. Traits can be composed together to form classes or other traits. We present a calculus for boxes and traits. Traits are units of fine-grained reuse, whereas boxes can be seen as units of coarse-grained reuse. The calculus is equipped with an ownership type system and allows us to combine coarse- and fine-grained reuse of code by maintaining encapsulation of components.
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hal-01054624 , version 1 (07-08-2014)

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Lorenzo Bettini, Ferruccio Damiani, Marco Luca, Kathrin Geilmann, Jan Schäfer. A Calculus for Boxes and Traits in a Java-Like Setting. 12th International Conference on Coordination Models and Languages (COORDINATION) Held as part of International Federated Conference on Distributed Computing Techniques (DisCoTec), Jun 2010, Amsterdam, Netherlands. pp.46-60, ⟨10.1007/978-3-642-13414-2_4⟩. ⟨hal-01054624⟩
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