General-purpose modeling
http://dbpedia.org/resource/General-purpose_modeling an entity of type: WikicatSpecificationLanguages
General-purpose modeling (GPM) is the systematic use of a general-purpose modeling language to represent the various facets of an object or a system. Examples of GPM languages are:
* The Unified Modeling Language (UML), an industry standard for modeling software-intensive systems
* EXPRESS, a data modeling language for product data, standardized as ISO 10303-11
* IDEF, a group of languages from the 1970s that aimed to be neutral, generic and reusable
* Gellish, an industry standard natural language oriented modeling language for storage and exchange of data and knowledge, published in 2005
* XML, a data modeling language now beginning to be used to model code (MetaL, Microsoft .Net [1])
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General-purpose modeling
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General-purpose modeling (GPM) is the systematic use of a general-purpose modeling language to represent the various facets of an object or a system. Examples of GPM languages are:
* The Unified Modeling Language (UML), an industry standard for modeling software-intensive systems
* EXPRESS, a data modeling language for product data, standardized as ISO 10303-11
* IDEF, a group of languages from the 1970s that aimed to be neutral, generic and reusable
* Gellish, an industry standard natural language oriented modeling language for storage and exchange of data and knowledge, published in 2005
* XML, a data modeling language now beginning to be used to model code (MetaL, Microsoft .Net [1]) GPM languages are in contrast with domain-specific modeling languages (DSMs).
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