The Tool As Object


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Tool and Object


Tool and Object

Author: Ralph Krömer

language: en

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Release Date: 2007-06-25


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Category theory is a general mathematical theory of structures and of structures of structures. It occupied a central position in contemporary mathematics as well as computer science. This book describes the history of category theory whereby illuminating its symbiotic relationship to algebraic topology, homological algebra, algebraic geometry and mathematical logic and elaboratively develops the connections with the epistemological significance.

Tool-supported Identification of Functional Concerns in Object-oriented Code


Tool-supported Identification of Functional Concerns in Object-oriented Code

Author: Mircea Trifu

language: en

Publisher: KIT Scientific Publishing

Release Date: 2014-10-16


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Concern identification aims to find the implementation of a functional concern in existing source code. In this work, concerns are described, using the Hierarchic Concern Model, as gray-boxes containing subconcerns, inputs, and outputs. The inputs and outputs are used as concern seeds to identify data-oriented abstractions of concern implementations, called concern skeletons. The identification approach is based on context free language reachability and supported by a tool, called CoDEx.

The Tool Instinct


The Tool Instinct

Author: François Osiurak

language: en

Publisher: John Wiley & Sons

Release Date: 2020-06-03


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Humans use countless tools and are constantly creating new ones. We are so prone to materiality that the changes we implement in our environment could put our very survival at stake. It has therefore become necessary to question the cognitive origins of this materiality. The Tool Instinct examines this subject by diametrically setting aside the idea that tool use is limited to manual activity. It proposes an original perspective that surpasses a great number of false beliefs regarding the relationship between humans and tools. The author argues that the human tendency to create and use tools relies on our ability (one that may be unique to our species) to generate our own physical problems, thereby resulting in a reasoning that is directed towards our physical world.