Working with Objects

De Semantic MediaWiki - Sandbox

Author(s): Trygve Reenskaug

Year (published): 1995-08-01T00:00:00.000-0700

Pages: 420

Abstract: "The first method that deals realistically with reuse, and one of the few that comes close to describing what I do when I design." --Ralph Johnson, University of Illinois

Introduction[modifier le wikicode]

Working With Objects is the authoritative account of the highly successful OOram method for software analysis, design, development, maintenance and reuse. OOram has been fine-tuned over a decade on hundreds of projects by Trygve Reenskaug and his collaborators. It is supported by available CASE tools, training, and consulting. Working With Objects is the source on a method which takes an evolutionary step forward in object-oriented development practices. OOram adds the intuitively simple but powerful concept of a role to object-oriented models and methods. For example, imagine trying to describe a person as an object. The most effective way to do this would be to independently describe each of the roles that person adopts (parent, employee, and so on) and then define how the person supports them. These ideas form the heart of the OOram approach. In a presentation rich with examples, Working With Objects is anything but the typical, dry methodology book. It tells real-life stories. It teaches how to apply role modeling and benefit from its inherent advantages, including: Multiple views of the same model Support for both data- and process-centered approaches Large systems described through a number of distinct models Derivation of composite models from simpler, base models Decentralized management of very large systems Programming language-independent design Step-by-step transformation of models into implementations Integration of powerful reuse techniques with work policies, processes and organization

Data from https://github.com/bvaughn/infinite-list-reflow-examples/blob/master/books.json

... davantage au sujet de « Working with Objects »
"The first method that deals realistically with reuse, and one of the few that comes close to describing what I do when I design." --Ralph Johnson, University of Illinois +
Working with Objects +
420 +
07:00:00, 1 août 1995 +
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