Conferences in Research and Practice in Information Technology
  

Online Version - Last Updated - 20 Jan 2012

 

 
Home
 

 
Procedures and Resources for Authors

 
Information and Resources for Volume Editors
 

 
Orders and Subscriptions
 

 
Published Articles

 
Upcoming Volumes
 

 
Contact Us
 

 
Useful External Links
 

 
CRPIT Site Search
 
    

ParaAJ: toward Reusable and Maintainable Aspect Oriented Programs

Aljasser, K. and Schachte, P.

    Aspect Oriented Programming (AOP) aims to ease maintenance and promote reuse of software components by separating core concerns from crosscutting concerns: aspects of a program that cannot be confined to a single program component. In AOP languages such as AspectJ, this kind of concern is encapsulated in an aspect and connected to main classes using pointcuts. This removes extraneous code from the classes of the program, allowing them to focus on their core purpose and making them more maintainable and reusable. The implementation of each crosscutting concern, which would have been scattered throughout an object oriented program, is centralised in a single aspect. Unfortunately, due to the way aspects and classes are associated, and the lack of an explicit interface between them, these aspects may be tightly coupled to the classes of the program and so may not be as reusable or maintainable as might be expected. We propose ParaAJ (Parametric Aspects), as an extension to AspectJ. ParaAJ allows classes to specify which aspects should be applied, and allows applications to specify which aspects to apply to which classes in what ways. This makes it easier for classes and aspects to be developed and maintained independently, and encourages reuse of both.
Cite as: Aljasser, K. and Schachte, P. (2009). ParaAJ: toward Reusable and Maintainable Aspect Oriented Programs. In Proc. Thirty-Second Australasian Computer Science Conference (ACSC 2009), Wellington, New Zealand. CRPIT, 91. Mans, B., Ed. ACS. 53-62.
pdf (from crpit.com) pdf (local if available) BibTeX EndNote GS
 

 

ACS Logo© Copyright Australian Computer Society Inc. 2001-2014.
Comments should be sent to the webmaster at crpit@scem.uws.edu.au.
This page last updated 16 Nov 2007