A taxonomy of tool-related issues affecting the adoption of model-driven engineering
Journal article, 2017

Although poor tool support is often blamed for the low uptake of model-driven engineering (MDE), recent studies have shown that adoption problems are as likely to be down to social and organizational factors as with tooling issues. This article discusses the impact of tools on MDE adoption and practice and does so while placing tooling within a broader organizational context. The article revisits previous data on MDE use in industry (19 in-depth interviews with MDE practitioners) and reanalyzes that data through the specific lens of MDE tools in an attempt to identify and categorize the issues that users had with the tools they adopted. In addition, the article presents new data: 20 new interviews in two specific companies—and analyzes it through the same lens. A key contribution of the paper is a loose taxonomy of tool-related considerations, based on empirical industry data, which can be used to reflect on the tooling landscape as well as inform future research on MDE tools.

Modeling tools

Model-driven engineering

Organizational change

Author

Jon Whittle

Lancaster University

John Hutchinson

Lancaster University

Mark Rouncefield

Lancaster University

Håkan Burden

University of Gothenburg

Rogardt Heldal

Chalmers, Computer Science and Engineering (Chalmers)

Software and Systems Modeling

1619-1366 (ISSN) 1619-1374 (eISSN)

Vol. 16 2 313-331

Subject Categories

Computer and Information Science

DOI

10.1007/s10270-015-0487-8

More information

Latest update

11/18/2019