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* [http://www.ceteva.com/xmf.html XMF by Ceteva]
 
A book that describes this concept, with examples, is ''Building Better Applications: a Theory of Efficient Software Development''.<ref>Dunlavey 1994.</ref> It takes the approach to capture requirements in the user's terms, and then to try to create an implementation language as [[isomorphism|isomorphic]] as possible to the user's descriptions, so that the mapping between requirements and implementation is as direct as possible. A measure of the closeness of this [[isomorphism]] is the "redundancy" of the language, defined as the number of editing operations needed to implement a stand-alone change in requirements. It is not assumed ''a-priori'' what is the best language for implementing the new language. Rather, the developer can choose among options created by analysis of the information flows — what information is acquired, what its structure is, when it is acquired, from whom, and what is done with it. See [[Linguistic Method]].
 
==See also==