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Difference between revisions of "Eclipse DemoCamps November 2009/Vienna"

(add agendas)
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# Chris Aniszczyk, [http://www.eclipsesource.com EclipseSource]
 
# Chris Aniszczyk, [http://www.eclipsesource.com EclipseSource]
 
# Jeff McAffer, [http://www.eclipsesource.com EclipseSource]
 
# Jeff McAffer, [http://www.eclipsesource.com EclipseSource]
 +
# Stefan Leopold

Revision as of 03:32, 10 November 2009

Eclipse-camp.gif What is an Eclipse DemoCamp?

Location

Vienna TU Freihaus.jpg

TU Vienna (Google Maps)
Room TBD


Date and Time

November 30, 2009
18:00 - 21:00 : Talks, between one break with refreshments
21:00 - "open end" : Eclipse come together


Organizers

Codeworks.png - Codecop.png - Jsug vienna logo.png

Sponsors

Lixto.gif - Agentex logo rgb 300dpi.jpg - Ciit-logo.gif
Javatraining dunkelblau final.png - Sphinx logo.gif

Planned Presenters


  • Peter Kofler, code-cop.org, Free Quality and Code Metric Plugins Demo
    • (outline pending)


  • Lixto Team, Lixto Software GmbH, "Eclipse-related aspects in Lixto Visual Developer"
    • Lixto Visual Developer (VD) is an integrated development environment specifically geared towards the visual development of Web data extraction programs, supporting complex navigation and extraction tasks on highly dynamic Web applications. It is built on top of the Eclipse IDE framework and embeds the Mozilla browser engine. In this talk, we give a brief overview of several Eclipse-related aspects in Visual Developer: This comprises Browser Integration using ATF, GUI creation with JFace/SWT, EMF for storing and managing our data models, ZEST for visualization of web navigation workflows, and our building framework to create a light-weight IDE. Moreover, we illustrate use of features for plugin composition and perspective customization allowing us to easily generate our second application, the Lixto Web Application Testing Solution, which is based on VD. In a "ten minutes of fame" quick tour, we will demonstrate these aspects of the Visual Developer and are eager to discuss further details in the reception after the talks.



  • Maximilian Weißböck, The Business Kitchen - "Speed up your development with Eclipse and Xtext"
    How to pragmatically and efficiently build and use DSL's in your project
    • Why do we need DSL's?
    • Benefits of using Xtext for your DSL
    • Demo: Real World Example DSL for Hibernate & Tapestry 5
    • Best practices to get you up and running in your project with Xtext



  • Christoph Mayerhofer, INSO, "ReviewClipse - Continuous Code-Reviews within the Eclipse IDE"
    • Features of ReviewClipse
    • 5 min Demo
    • Architecture: Extension-Points
    • Outlook: What we are working on


  • Tom Schindl, BestSolution.at, "E4 - A short overview"
    This talk will give you a very very short overview what e4 is about, the design ideas behind and ends with a small e4 Rcp Application demostrating some of e4s features.


  • Florian Pirchner, "Riena-EMF-Dynamic-Views (redview)"
    • What is redview?
    • Short live demo
    • Basic architecture
    • Redviews WYSIWYG editor
    • Live demo with CDO integration. Redviews are stored in a repository in munich. Changes at the model are pushed to all connected clients realtime.


  • Robert Handschmann, Sphinx IT Consulting, "MDSD with Serapis using Eclipse Plugins"
    • Sphinx IT Consulting works on an Eclipse based MDSD Solution since several years.
    • Robert Handschmann demonstrates the Language Workbench in action and shows the tight integration of the plugins into the Eclipse Platform.


  • Philip Langer, Business Informatics Group, TU Wien, "The Operation Recorder: Specifying "Model Refactorings By-Example"
    • Predefined composite operations are handy for efficient software modeling, e.g., for the automatic execution of refactorings, and for the introduction of patterns in existing models. Some modeling environments provide an initial set of basic refactoring operations, but hardly offer any extension points for the user. Even if extension points exist, the introduction of new composite operations requires programming skills and deep knowledge of the respective metamodel.
    • In our demonstration we present the OperationRecorder, a tool for specifying composite operations, like refactorings, within the user's modeling language and environment of choice. The user models the composite operation by-example, which enables the semi-automatic derivation of a generic composite operation specification. This specification may be used in further modeling scenarios, like model refactoring and model versioning. We demonstrate our tool by creating two refactoring specifications for UML class diagrams and UML state machine diagrams.
    • After outlining the approach from a theoretical point of view we will demonstrate the easy and efficient usage of our tool by creating two refactoring specification in the domain of the UML class diagram as well as the UML state machine diagram. For educational reasons we start with a small example, the //Convert to Singleton// refactoring, where a plain UML class is transformed to act as singleton. To get a complete impression of the expressive power we continue with a more complicated example, //Introduce Composite State// in UML state machine diagrams, for which the definition of user input as well as iterations are necessary.

All demo slots are now occupied. New demos can now only be added if some presenter drops out.

Who Is Attending

If you plan on attending please add your name and company to the list below. We'd like to see as many people show up as possible.
If you don't want to create an account, just drop us a mail at democamp09@jsug.at or message Michael Clay on Xing. We really appreciate it!

  1. Michael Clay
  2. Peter Kofler
  3. Christian Schiestl, Sphinx IT Consulting
  4. Michael Greifeneder, JSUG
  5. Robert Baumgartner, Lixto Software GmbH
  6. Gerald Ledermueller, Lixto Software GmbH
  7. Alex Hartmann, Lixto Lixto Software GmbH
  8. Karin Schellner, Lixto Software GmbH
  9. Karl Hönninger (Speaker)
  10. Maximilian Weißböck (Speaker)
  11. Werner Keil (Speaker)
  12. Christoph Mayerhofer (Speaker)
  13. Tom Schindl (Speaker)
  14. Josef Krammer
  15. Florian Pirchner (Speaker)
  16. Ralph Mueller, Eclipse Foundation (will pay the beer after the event)
  17. Bernd Schlapsi
  18. Joachim Grüneis
  19. Julian Motamedi
  20. Hans Sowa
  21. Robert Handschmann, Sphinx IT Consulting (Speaker)
  22. Philip Langer (Speaker)
  23. Gregor B. Rosenauer, ITSV GmbH
  24. Michael Schaffler, CIIT
  25. Christoph Nagl
  26. Alexander Wascher
  27. Erich Vetter
  28. Andreas Petersson
  29. Christian Schaefer, CNS
  30. Georg Weidenauer
  31. Görge Albrecht
  32. Mario Winterer, Software Competence Center Hagenberg GmbH
  33. Eva Fulierova, CIIT
  34. Christian Flandorfer
  35. Daniel Passecker
  36. Philip Graf, Zühlke Engineering (Austria) GmbH
  37. Jürgen Fritz
  38. Michael Krieber
  39. Christopher Neufeld-Chalupa, CSC Austria
  40. Lubos Bistak, Sphinx IT Consulting
  41. Matthias Filter, Bundesinstitut für Risikobewertung
  42. Balasz Lichtl
  43. Zmary Gharwal, the business kitchen
  44. Roland Germ, CPB Software (Austria) Gmbh
  45. Horst Dehmer, Frequentis AG
  46. Igor Jancev, Smile it solutions
  47. Chris Aniszczyk, EclipseSource
  48. Jeff McAffer, EclipseSource
  49. Stefan Leopold

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