Before JFLAP, there were several software tools related to automata theory developed by
Susan H. Rodger and her students starting around 1990 in the Computer Science Department at
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. In 1992, the first published paper at a DIMACS 2012 workshop described a related tool called NPDA (the paper was published later in 1994 in a DIMACS series). NPDA then evolved into FLAP, including also finite-state machines and Turing machines. In 1993, a paper on Formal Languages and Automata Package (FLAP) was published . At that time, the tool was written in
C++ and
X Window. Around 1994, Rodger moved to
Duke University and continued tool development. Around 1996, FLAP was converted to Java and the first paper mentioned JFLAP was published in 1996 Along the way, other tools were developed as stand alone tools and then later integrated into JFLAP. For example, a paper in 1999 described how JFLAP now allowed one to experiment with construction type proofs, such as converting an NFA to a DFA to a minimal state DFA, and as another example, converting NPDA to CFG and vice versa. In 2002 JFLAP was converted to Swing. In 2005-2007 a study was run with fourteen institutions using JFLAP. A paper on this study in 2009 showed that students using JFLAP thought JFLAP made them feel more engaged in the class, and made learning the concepts easier. The history of JFLAP is covered on the jflap.org site, and includes over 35 students from
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and
Duke University who have worked on JFLAP and related tools since 1990. A paper by Chakraborty, Saxena and Katti entitled "Fifty years of automata simulation: a review" in ACM Inroads magazine in December 2011 stated the following about JFLAP:{{cite journal |author1=P. Chakraborty |author2=P.C. Saxena |author3=C. P. Katti |year = 2011 |title =Fifty years of automata simulation: a review |journal =ACM Inroads |volume =2 |issue=4 |pages = 59–70 |doi=10.1145/2038876.2038893 "The effort put into developing this tool is unparalleled in the field of simulation of automata. As a result, today it is the most sophisticated tool for simulating automata. It now covers a large number of topics on automata and related fields. The tool is also the best documented among the tools for simulation of automata." and "The tool uses state of the art graphics and is one of the easiest to use. The tool is undoubtedly the most widely used tool for simulation of automata developed to date. Thousands of students have used it at numerous universities in more than a hundred countries." ==Topics covered in JFLAP==