Developers can toggle "views" to hide all code except the specific feature they are currently maintaining, reducing cognitive load without breaking the file structure. 🛠️ Key Implementation Tools

Virtual Separation of Concerns (VSoC) is a software engineering paradigm that achieves modularity through tool support rather than physical code restructuring. Instead of moving code into separate files or components (physical separation), developers use annotations and IDE features to view, hide, and manage specific "features" or "concerns" within a unified code base. 🧩 Core Concept: Modularity Without Migration

Rather than using complex mechanisms like Aspect-Oriented Programming (AOP), VSoC often relies on simple annotations or preprocessor-like directives.

Research in VSoC, led largely by Christian Kästner and his colleagues, has produced several specialized tools to support this workflow:

Traditional Separation of Concerns (SoC) usually requires —moving code into different classes, packages, or aspects. VSoC challenges this by keeping code in its original context but using tools to emulate modularity.

Modern IDEs like the Colored Integrated Development Environment (CIDE) allow developers to "color" code fragments associated with specific features.

Virtual Separation Of Concerns < EXTENDED >

Developers can toggle "views" to hide all code except the specific feature they are currently maintaining, reducing cognitive load without breaking the file structure. 🛠️ Key Implementation Tools

Virtual Separation of Concerns (VSoC) is a software engineering paradigm that achieves modularity through tool support rather than physical code restructuring. Instead of moving code into separate files or components (physical separation), developers use annotations and IDE features to view, hide, and manage specific "features" or "concerns" within a unified code base. 🧩 Core Concept: Modularity Without Migration Virtual Separation of Concerns

Rather than using complex mechanisms like Aspect-Oriented Programming (AOP), VSoC often relies on simple annotations or preprocessor-like directives. Developers can toggle "views" to hide all code

Research in VSoC, led largely by Christian Kästner and his colleagues, has produced several specialized tools to support this workflow: 🧩 Core Concept: Modularity Without Migration Rather than

Traditional Separation of Concerns (SoC) usually requires —moving code into different classes, packages, or aspects. VSoC challenges this by keeping code in its original context but using tools to emulate modularity.

Modern IDEs like the Colored Integrated Development Environment (CIDE) allow developers to "color" code fragments associated with specific features.