Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Kevin Lano
British computer scientist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Kevin C. Lano (born 1963) is a British computer scientist.
Remove ads
Life and work
Summarize
Perspective
Kevin Lano studied at the University of Reading, attaining a first class degree in Mathematics and Computer Science, and the University of Bristol where he completed his doctorate.[2] He was an originator of formal object-oriented techniques (Z++), and developed a combination of UML and formal methods[3] in a number of papers and books. He was one of the founders of the Precise UML group, who influenced the definition of UML 2.0.[citation needed] Lano published the book Advanced Systems Design with Java, UML and MDA (Butterworth-Heinemann, ISBN 0-7506-6496-7) in 2005. He is also the editor of UML 2 Semantics and Applications, published by Wiley in October 2009, among a number of computer science books.[4]
Lano was formerly a Research Officer at the Oxford University Computing Laboratory (now the Oxford University Department of Computer Science). He is a reader at the Department of Informatics at King's College London.[2]
In 2008, Lano and his co-authors Andy Evans, Robert France, and Bernard Rumpe, were awarded the Ten Year Most Influential Paper Award at the MODELS 2008 Conference on Model Driven Engineering Languages and Systems for the 1998 paper "The UML as a Formal Modeling Notation".[1]
Remove ads
Selected publications
- Lano, K. (1991). "Z++, an object-orientated extension to Z". In Nicholls, John (ed.). Z User Workshop, Oxford 1990. Workshops in Computing. Springer. pp. 151–172.
- Evans, A.; France, R.; Lano, K.; Rumpe, B. (1998). "The UML as a Formal Modeling Notation". The Unified Modeling Language. «UML»'98: Beyond the Notation. Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Vol. 1618. Springer-Verlag. pp. 336–348. arXiv:1409.6919. doi:10.1007/978-3-540-48480-6_26. ISBN 978-3-540-66252-5. S2CID 32729.
Remove ads
Books
- Reverse Engineering and Software Maintenance (McGraw-Hill, 1993)
- Object-oriented Specification Case Studies (Prentice Hall, 1993)
- Formal Object-oriented Development (Springer, 1995)
- The B Language and Method: A Guide to Practical Formal Development (Springer, 1996)
- Software Design in Java 2 (Palgrave, 2002)
- UML 2 Semantics and Applications (Wiley, 2009), editor
- Model-Driven Development using UML and Java (Cengage, 2009)
- Agile MBD using UML-RSDS (Taylor & Francis, 2016)
- Financial Software Engineering (Springer, 2019), with Howard Haughton
References
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads