Education
Jean-Marc Jézéquel received an engineering degree from Telecom Bretagne in 1986 and a Doctor of Philosophy from the University of Rennes 1 in Rennes in 1989.
(An indispensable resource for anyone working with Eiffel,...)
An indispensable resource for anyone working with Eiffel, this up-to-date guide provides full coverage of the most recent version of the language, focusing on Eiffel's practical use in the development of large, mission-critical software systems. In addition to a comprehensive description of Eiffel's syntax and semantics, you will find in-depth information on style guides, analysis and design, design patterns, and validation and testing. Descriptions and comparisons of available compilers and libraries will help you decide which Eiffel tools best fit your development needs. The book even includes an Eiffel resource guide. The book's most notable feature is its three large-scale case studies that demonstrate Eiffel in action, illustrating implementation techniques and showcasing Eiffel's power and effectiveness in three different realms: the MIS world, the embedded systems/telecommunications world, and the numeric world.By reading this book, you will not only obtain a knowledge of the mechanics of Eiffel programming, but you will also come away with an understanding of Eiffel's role in the field of object-oriented technology and a sense of the language's strong potential in large software development. 0201633817B04062001
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0201633817/?tag=2022091-20
director researcher academic school teacher
Jean-Marc Jézéquel received an engineering degree from Telecom Bretagne in 1986 and a Doctor of Philosophy from the University of Rennes 1 in Rennes in 1989.
Professionally, Jean-Marc Jézéquel worked as a computer scientist at the University of Rennes, France. His research contributions have laid the foundations of the theory of Model-driven architecture. Since January 2012, he has been Director of IRISA.
He then worked for the Transpac (network) company on an Intelligent Network project
In 1991, he became a researcher (Chargé de recherche) at the National Center for Scientific Research (Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique).
During most of 1996, he has been an invited researcher in Pr. Yonezawa"s lab, in the University of Tokyo, Japan.
Since October 2000, he has been Professor of Software Engineering at University of Rennes 1, where he pursued research on the foundations of Model Driven Engineering. From 2000 to 2012 he headed an Inria research team called Triskell.
From January 2012, he is Director of IRISA, a 700 people public research lab in informatics.
(An indispensable resource for anyone working with Eiffel,...)