Ada
User Journal
The journal for the
international
Ada community
|
Call for Papers
Publication
Ada User Journal is produced by Ada-Europe. It appears four
times
a year, on the last days of March, June, September and December. Copy
dates
are two months prior to publication, but exceptions may be made for
items
of topical importance.
Subscription Policy
Ada User Journal is sent to all members of the Ada-Europe
organisation,
whether direct or indirect (i.e. via associate national organisations).
Aims
Ada User Journal aims to inform readers of developments in the
Ada
programming language and its use, general Ada-related software
engineering
issues and Ada-related activities in Europe and other parts of the
world.
The language of the journal is English.
The topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
-
Ada Language Status and Evolution:
A watchful eye on the ongoing Ada language revision process, with
attention
to user needs and vendor visions that may prompt amendments and
enhancements to the language.
-
Ada Experience Reports:
Field
reports on the use of Ada in industrial projects. Insight on management
approaches, programming techniques, software engineering metrics,
comparisons
with past or parallel experiences with other languages
-
Critical Applications:
Reports
and prospects on the use of Ada in real-time embedded systems,
distributed
(possibly heterogeneous) systems, high-integrity and critical systems.
-
Education and Training:
Issues,
challenges and prospects on the use of Ada in Secondary or College
Education.
What should be taught to students to make good, language-neutral
software
engineers. What project managers should know to make appropriate
selection
of programming languages. What it takes to re-train to proficient use
of
Ada personnel with no Ada education.
-
Software Engineering at large:
-
Case Studies and Experiments: Impact of language, tools
and methods
on the problem and the project.
-
Management of Software Development and Maintenance: Issues
on requirements
engineering, use of the object-oriented paradigm, software reuse,
reverse
engineering, management approaches and techniques.
-
Software Quality: Views on quality management practices.
Experience
reports on verification, validation and certification.
-
Tools: CASE tools, software development environments,
compilers,
debuggers, utilities, browsers.
-
Component-based Architectures
: Architectural patterns for software design and composition, design
frameworks,
component and class libraries, component design.
The Journal publishes the following types of material:
-
Refereed original articles on technical matters concerning Ada and
related
topics.
-
Reprints of articles published elsewhere that deserve a wider audience.
-
Commentaries on matters relating to Ada and software engineering.
-
Announcements and reports of conferences and workshops.
-
Reviews of publications in the field of software engineering.
-
News and miscellany of interest to the Ada community.
Further details on our approach to these are given below.
Original papers
Manuscripts should be submitted in accordance with the submission
guidelines
(below) .
All original technical contributions are submitted to refereeing by
at least two people. Names of referees will be kept confidential, but
their
comments will be relayed to the authors at the discretion of the
Editor.
Proofs will normally be sent to the first named author to check
typographic
mistakes or errors of fact. No part of the article may be rewritten on
proof. All changes and addenda submitted by the authors will be
incorporated
at the discretion of the Editor. Corrected proofs must be returned to
the
Editor within three days of receipt.
The first named author will receive a complimentary copy of the
issue
of the journal in which their paper appears.
By submitting a manuscript, authors grant Ada-Europe an unlimited
licence
to publish (and, if appropriate republish) it, if and when the article
is accepted for publication. We do not require that authors assign
copyright
to the Journal. Unless the authors state explicitly otherwise,
submission
of an article is taken to imply that it represents original,
unpublished
work, not under consideration for publication elsewhere.
News and product announcements
Ada User Journal is one of the ways in which people find out
what
is going on in the Ada community. Our readers need not surf the WWW and
USENET to find out what is going on in the Ada world and in the
neighbouring
and/or competing communities. We will reprint or report on items that
may
be of interest to them.
Commentaries
We publish commentaries on Ada and software engineering topics. These
may
represent the views either of individuals or of organisations. Such
articles
can be of any length - inclusion will be at the Editor's discretion.
Opinions expressed within the pages of Ada User Journal do
not
necessarily represent the views of the Editor and of the Ada-Europe
Board.
Announcements and conference reports
We are happy to publicise and report on events that may be of interest
to our readers.
Reprinted articles
While original material is our first priority, we are willing to
reprint
(with the permission of the copyright holder) material previously
submitted
elsewhere if it is appropriate to give it a wider audience. This
includes
papers published in North America that are not easily available in
Europe.
We have a reciprocal approach in granting permission for other
publications
to reprint papers originally published in Ada User Journal.
Reviews
Inclusion of any review in the Journal is at the discretion of
the
Editor.
One member of our Review Panel will be asked by the Editor to review
any book or other publication sent to us. We are also prepared to print
reviews submitted from elsewhere if judged appropriate.
Any individual interested in joining the Review Panel is invited to
contact the Editor.
Submission guidelines
All material for publication should be sent to the Editor. Electronic
submission
is much preferred but typed manuscripts will be accepted. Authors are
invited
to contact the Editor
by electronic mail to determine the best format for submission. The
Editor's
address is:
Prof. Luís Miguel Pinho
Editor-in-Chief, Ada User Journal
c/o CISTER Research Center, Polytechnic Institute of Porto (ISEP/IPP)
Rua Dr. Antonio Bernardino de Almeida, 431
4200-072 Porto,
Portugal
E-mail: lmp@isep.ipp.pt
with Subject line beginning with: [Ada User Journal]
Our refereeing process aims to be rapid. Currently, accepted papers
submitted
electronically are typically published 3-6 months after submission.
Items
of topical interest will normally appear in the next edition.
There is no limitation on the length of papers, though a paper
longer
than 10,000 words would be regarded as exceptional. Pages should be
numbered
consecutively.
The name(s) of the author(s) and their postal and email address
(where
available) should be provided in the heading of the paper. The address
of one author will normally be sufficient. We will endeavour to print
(black
and white) digitised photographs (passport style) of the authors where
these are provided.
Programming extracts will normally be typeset as set out by the
author.
Please avoid where possible lines longer than 80 characters. Extracts
in
bold or capitals will normally remain as such. The program layout style
defined in the Ada
95 Quality and Style Guide is preferred.
SI units should be used, or conversions provided by the author.
The Vancouver System is used for references. They should be cited in
the text thus: 'Smith [3] states...' A number should never start a
sentence.
Groups of references should be shortened as far as possible, e.g.
'Recent
research [2, 5, 7-12]...' References should be placed in the reference
section at the end of a paper in number order, i.e. reference 1 should
be first even if the author's name begins with a Z. The style should
follow
the examples below.
Higgon, S. and Hulmgrew, B. (1994) Distributed Real Time Systems and
Debug Environment, Ada User Journal, 15/2, 153-159.
Books:
Barnes, J.G.P. (2006) Programming in Ada 2005, Addison-Wesley.
Edited books:
Tooby, B. (1993) A brief introduction to Ada, in Ada Yearbook 1993,
Loftus, C. (ed), IOS Press, pp:1-8.
Electronic documents:
Brukhardt, R. (2000) Why Certify Ada Compilers?,
URL http://www.adaic.org/compilers/acaa-ex.html, (last checked: 12th December 2006).
Page maintenance: webmaster@ada-europe.org
Last modified: Mon Aug 20 13:33:58 CEST 2007