The lack of a dominant Object-Oriented (OO) standard has been a hindrance to the OO paradigm's successful adoption on a large scale. Currently, within different versions of OO methodologies, various OO concepts can exist under different names and interpretations. While recently there have been some attempts to standardize OO systems development, until now, no standard has emerged as the dominant standard in practice. The objective of this paper is to assess benefits of a dominant standard, and to investigate strengths and weaknesses of the current approaches towards standardization. Based on this investigation, we outline how these different standardization approaches can contribute toward the emergence of a dominant standard. We conclude that a metamodelling approach, combined with argumentation and ontology when necessary, has the best chances to achieve the goal that, to quote Snyder, `those applying OO technology will one day speak the same language'.

doi.org/10.1109/HICSS.1997.661564, hdl.handle.net/1765/53958
Proceedings of the 1997 30th Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences. Part 1 (of 6)
Rotterdam School of Management (RSM), Erasmus University

van Hillegersberg, J., & Kumar, K. (1997). Will a dominant standard for Object-Oriented system development emerge?. Presented at the Proceedings of the 1997 30th Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences. Part 1 (of 6). doi:10.1109/HICSS.1997.661564