By Valdis Berzins, Michael Gray, David Naumann
Communications of the ACM,
May 1986,
Vol. 29 No. 5, Pages 402-415
10.1145/5689.5691
Comments
A five-year experience with abstraction-based software-development techniques in the university environment indicates that the investment required to support the paradigm in practice is returned in terms of greater ability to control complexity in large projects—provided there exists a set of software tools sufficient to support the approach.
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