Object ThinkingMicrosoft Press, 2004. gada 11. febr. - 368 lappuses In OBJECT THINKING, esteemed object technologist David West contends that the mindset makes the programmer—not the tools and techniques. Delving into the history, philosophy, and even politics of object-oriented programming, West reveals how the best programmers rely on analysis and conceptualization—on thinking—rather than formal process and methods. Both provocative and pragmatic, this book gives form to what’s primarily been an oral tradition among the field’s revolutionary thinkers—and it illustrates specific object-behavior practices that you can adopt for true object design and superior results. Gain an in-depth understanding of:
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... Figure 1-1 or Figure 1-2 a better visual depiction of an object? Encapsulation Barrier operationX Data Structure operationY operationZ F01MQ01Figure 1-1 A graphical object model using UML graphical syntax. F01MQ02Figure 1-2 A person as ...
... Figure 1-1. (Ken Auer calls this a “soccer ball” diagram because the segmentation resembles that of a soccer ball.) An object thinker, on the other hand, will pick the photograph. The soccer ball diagram has the advantage of familiarity ...
... Figure 1-3b is a UML class, and Figure 1-3c is an object model. Both Figure 1-3a and Figure 1-3b reflect typical thinking about customers as a collection of facts that must be remembered by the system. Both examples name the “object ...
... Figure 1-3c) might be arbitrarily complex and need not be related in any formal way to whatever bit of knowledge uniquely identifies the object. Note There are advantages to modeling objects differently from entities. Here are two ...
... Figure 1-4. At the far left, the developer is thinking about the problem and its intrinsic nature, and at the far right, the developer is thinking of the most precise details of implementing a program. As we move from left to right, we ...
Saturs
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33 | |
From Philosophy to Culture | 63 |
Metaphor Bridge to the Unfamiliar | 91 |
Vocabulary Words to Think With | 117 |
Method Process and Models | 151 |
Discovery | 183 |
Thinking Toward Design | 219 |
All the Worlds a Stage | 247 |
Wrapping Up | 293 |
Bibliography | 309 |
Index | 321 |
About the Author | 335 |