520 research outputs found
Browser-based Analysis of Web Framework Applications
Although web applications evolved to mature solutions providing sophisticated
user experience, they also became complex for the same reason. Complexity
primarily affects the server-side generation of dynamic pages as they are
aggregated from multiple sources and as there are lots of possible processing
paths depending on parameters. Browser-based tests are an adequate instrument
to detect errors within generated web pages considering the server-side process
and path complexity a black box. However, these tests do not detect the cause
of an error which has to be located manually instead. This paper proposes to
generate metadata on the paths and parts involved during server-side processing
to facilitate backtracking origins of detected errors at development time.
While there are several possible points of interest to observe for
backtracking, this paper focuses user interface components of web frameworks.Comment: In Proceedings TAV-WEB 2010, arXiv:1009.330
2003 commencement speech to the University of Montana
Patricia Goedicke retired from the University of Montana in 2003. As one of her last acts as professor, she gave a commencement speech in which she elaborated upon the importance of the imagination in understanding each other and the world we live in. These materials may be found in Mss 739, Series IV, Commencement speech, 2003.https://scholarworks.umt.edu/goedicke/1016/thumbnail.jp
Drafts of For All the Sad Rain
For All the Sad Rain appeared first in The Slackwater Review in 1984 before appearing as the prelude to The Wind of Our Going, published in 1985. These drafts range in date from 1978-1983.https://scholarworks.umt.edu/goedicke/1017/thumbnail.jp
June 1968 notebook entry
In these handwritten drafts of a poem titled The Outer Banks, one begins to see the framework of the finished poem. Gone are the overt references to specific assassinations, such as Whitman\u27s lilacs in commemoration of Lincoln\u27s death and the image of Robert Kennedy\u27s funeral train. Instead, the poem is framed with the speaks descent to the Outer Banks and her realization that we must build more on less, arising out of a more generalized sense of loss and dissolution.https://scholarworks.umt.edu/goedicke/1025/thumbnail.jp
Letter to Sam Hamill
In this letter to Sam Hamill at Copper Canyon Press, officially submits her manuscript to Copper Canyon for publication. As stated in the letter, she had previously submitted the manuscript to Milkweed Press, who published her prior three books, to no success. Copper Canyon ultimately agreed to publish As Earth Begins to End, which was one of Goedicke\u27s most acclaimed works.https://scholarworks.umt.edu/goedicke/1018/thumbnail.jp
Comments by Cal Bedient on poems by Patricia Goedicke
These drafts of poems by Goedicke contain comments by Bedient. These poems were part of a manuscript that would be published under the title Invisible Horses.https://scholarworks.umt.edu/goedicke/1012/thumbnail.jp
Notebook entry dated May 11, 1999
In this handwritten entry, Patricia Goedicke writes of her husband\u27s death and reflects upon its impact on a a poem titled Third Rail, which she continues to draft later in the entry.https://scholarworks.umt.edu/goedicke/1006/thumbnail.jp
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