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    Complexity measurement of a graphical programming language and comparison of a graphical and a textual design language

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    LD5655.V855_1987.G633.pdf (5.487Mb)
    Downloads: 211
    Date
    1987-06-15
    Author
    Goff, Roger Allen
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    Abstract
    For many years the software engineering community has been attacking the software reliability problem on two fronts. First via design methodologies, languages and tools as a precheck on quality and second by measuring the quality of produced software as a postcheck. This research attempts to unify the approach to creating reliable software by providing the ability to measure the quality of a design prior to its implementation. Also presented is a comparison of a graphical and a textual design language in an effort to support cognitive science research findings that the human brain works more effectively in images than in text.
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10919/45686
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    • Masters Theses [21560]

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