Abstract

Chatbots are becoming a common component of many types of software systems. But they are typically developed as a side feature using ad-hoc tools and custom integrations. Moreover, current frameworks are efficient only when designing simple chatbot applications while they still require advanced technical knowledge to define complex interactions and are difficult to evolve along with the company needs. In addition, the deployment of a chatbot application usually requires a deep understanding of the targeted platforms, especially back-end connections, increasing the development and maintenance costs.In this paper, we discuss our experiences building, evolving and distributing the Xatkit framework. Xatkit is a model-based framework built around a Domain-Specific Language to define chatbots (and voicebots and bots in general) in a platform-independent way. Xatkit also comes with a runtime engine that automatically deploys the chatbot application and manages the defined conversation logic over the platforms of choice.Xatkit has significantly evolved since its initial release. This paper focuses on describing the evolution and the reasons (technical and non-technical) that triggered them. We believe our lessons learned can be useful to any other initiative trying to build a successful industrial-level chatbot platform, and in general, any type of model-based solution.

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