Generic Modeling Environment
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Find sources: "Generic Modeling Environment" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (December 2015) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
The Generic Modeling Environment (GME) is a domain-specific, model-integrated program synthesis tool for creating domain-specific models of large-scale systems. GME development started in 2000 at Vanderbilt University, US and continues well into 2022. Initially it only supported MS Windows OS,[1] but later evolved into WebGME, a web- and Node.js- based software.[2] Its primary purpose is model-building.
Overview
[edit ]GME allows users to define new modeling languages using UML-based metamodels. GME was developed in 2000 by the Institute for Software Integrated Systems at Vanderbilt University.[1] GME is a part of the META Tool Suite and the Adaptive Vehicle Make program. The main language it uses is CyPhyML.
hierarchy, multiple aspects, sets, references, and explicit constraints
WebGME
[edit ]The new version of GME, called WebGME, is entirely web-browser based. It supports simultaneous distributed collaborative editing of models and has a version controlled database backend in the cloud. The native file format is .webgmexm.
See also
[edit ]- Adaptive Vehicle Make (AVM)
- Domain-specific modelling (DSM)
- Executable Architecture (EA)
- MetaCASE tool
- Ptolemy Project
References
[edit ]- ^ a b GME Manual and User Guide (PDF), 2018, retrieved July 18, 2023
- ^ Next Generation (Meta)Modeling: Web- and Cloud-based Collaborative Tool Infrastructure (PDF), Institute for Software Integrated Systems, Vanderbilt University, 2014, p. 20, retrieved July 18, 2023
External links
[edit ]
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