Abstract is missing.
- Design at largeScott Klemmer. 1 [doi]
- Explicitness in language designMartin Erwig. 2 [doi]
- Too much, too little, or just right? Ways explanations impact end users' mental modelsTodd Kulesza, Simone Stumpf, Margaret M. Burnett, Sherry Yang, Irwin Kwan, Weng-Keen Wong. 3-10 [doi]
- Discovering action idioms bridging the gap between system-level events and human-level actionsMelinda T. Gervasio, Thomas J. Lee. 11-14 [doi]
- An empirical study of spreadsheet authors' mental models in explaining and debugging tasksBennett Kankuzi, Jorma Sajaniemi. 15-18 [doi]
- Designing inference rules for spider diagramsGem Stapleton, Mateja Jamnik, Matej Urbas. 19-26 [doi]
- Policy enforcement and verification with Timed Modeling Spider DiagramsPaolo Bottoni, Andrew Fish. 27-34 [doi]
- A generic framework for executable gestural interaction modelsRomuald Deshayes, Philippe A. Palanque, Tom Mens. 35-38 [doi]
- Curve-based diagram specification and constructionGennaro Costagliola, Mattia De Rosa, Andrew Fish, Vittorio Fuccella, Rafiq Saleh. 39-42 [doi]
- A comprehensive field study of end-user programming on mobile devicesSihan Li, Tao Xie, Nikolai Tillmann. 43-50 [doi]
- A plug-in architecture for connecting to new data sources on mobile devicesKerry Shih-Ping Chang, Brad A. Myers, Gene M. Cahill, Soumya Simanta, Edwin J. Morris, Grace A. Lewis. 51-58 [doi]
- Predator behavior in the wild web world of bugs: An information foraging theory perspectiveSandeep Kaur Kuttal, Anita Sarma, Gregg Rothermel. 59-66 [doi]
- Protecting privacy: Towards a visual framework for handling end-user dataIan Oliver, John Howse, Gem Stapleton. 67-74 [doi]
- Just model! - Putting automatic synthesis of node-link-diagrams into practiceChristian Schneider, Miro Spönemann, Reinhard von Hanxleden. 75-82 [doi]
- Querying model-driven spreadsheetsJácome Cunha, João Paulo Fernandes, Jorge Mendes, Rui Pereira, João Saraiva. 83-86 [doi]
- Using concrete visual notations as first class citizens for model transformation specificationIman Avazpour, John Grundy. 87-90 [doi]
- A suite of domain-specific visual languages for scientific software application modellingMohamed Almorsy, John Grundy, Richard J. Sadus, Willem van Straten, David G. Barnes, Owen Kaluza. 91-94 [doi]
- Setting the scene: Scaffolding stories to benefit middle school students learning to programJordana H. Kerr, Mary Chou, Reilly Ellis, Caitlin Kelleher. 95-98 [doi]
- A domain-specific language for enabling doctors to specify biomechanical protocolsFrancisca Pérez, Pedro Valderas, Joan Fons. 99-102 [doi]
- What use is a backseat driver? A qualitative investigation of pair programmingDanielle L. Jones, Scott D. Fleming. 103-110 [doi]
- Natural End-User Development of Web MashupsSaeed Aghaee, Cesare Pautasso, Antonella De Angeli. 111-118 [doi]
- Visualization of fine-grained code change historyYoungSeok Yoon, Brad A. Myers, Sebon Koo. 119-126 [doi]
- Customizing the visualization and interaction for embedded domain-specific languages in a structured editorDimitar Asenov, Peter Muller. 127-130 [doi]
- Colour beads visual representation of compositional relational programsGorkem Pacaci, Andreas Hamfelt. 131-134 [doi]
- A component-based approach for specifying reusable visual languagesAmine El Kouhen, Cédric Dumoulin, Sebastien Gerard, Pierre Boulet. 135-138 [doi]
- Specifying generic depictions of language constructs for 3D visual languagesJan Wolter. 139-142 [doi]
- Towards generalizing expert programmers' suggestions for novice programmersMichelle Ichinco, Aaron Zemach, Caitlin Kelleher. 143-150 [doi]
- End-user programmers in trouble: Can the Idea Garden help them to help themselves?Jill Cao, Irwin Kwan, Faezeh Bahmani, Margaret M. Burnett, Scott D. Fleming, Joshua Jordahl, Amber Horvath, Sherry Yang. 151-158 [doi]
- Smell-driven performance analysis for end-user programmersChristopher Chambers, Chris Scaffidi. 159-166 [doi]
- Answering program understanding questions on demand with task-specific runtime informationBrian Burg. 167-168 [doi]
- Helping end users find and fix performance issues in visual dataflow codeChristopher Chambers. 169-170 [doi]
- Programmer, interruptedChris Parnin. 171-172 [doi]
- Supporting novice programmers with natural language in the early stage of programmingEdgar Cambranes. 173-174 [doi]
- Idea garden tuning and generalizationFaezeh Bahmani. 175-176 [doi]
- Involving older adults in the design and development of free/open source softwareJennifer L. Davidson. 177-178 [doi]
- Applying cognitive load theory to generate effective programming tutorialsKyle J. Harms. 179-180 [doi]
- A domain-specific modeling approach for gestural interactionRomuald Deshayes. 181-182 [doi]
- Variation support for end usersSandeep Kaur Kuttal. 183-184 [doi]
- Better code management for end-user programming on mobile devicesSihan Li. 185-186 [doi]
- Better backtracking support for programmersYoungSeok Yoon. 187-188 [doi]
- Improving user comprehension of Euler diagramsAndrew Blake, Gem Stapleton, Peter Rodgers, Liz Cheek, John Howse. 189-190 [doi]
- Static component compatibility visualisation for various component modelsKamil Jezek, Lukas Holy, Premek Brada. 191-192 [doi]
- Framework for automatic generation of graphical layout compatible with multiple platformsPetr Jezek, Roman Moucek, Yann Le Franc, Thomas Wachtler, Jan Grewe. 193-194 [doi]
- KIELER: Building on automatic layout for pragmatics-aware modelingMiro Spönemann, Christoph Daniel Schulze, Christian Motika, Christian Schneider, Reinhard von Hanxleden. 195-196 [doi]
- PetriNect: A tool for executable modeling of gestural interactionRomuald Deshayes, Tom Mens, Philippe A. Palanque. 197-198 [doi]
- QuerySheet: A bidirectional query environment for model-driven spreadsheetsOrlando Belo, Jacorne Cunha, Joao Paulo Femandes, Jorge Mendes, Rui Pereira, João Saraiva. 199-200 [doi]