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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No grāmatas satura
1.–5. rezultāts no 31.
... database properly. UML models need not be normalized, but if you intend to fully utilize an automated tool, such as ... database schema and recompile the database. It's not necessary to fully accept the Whorf-Sapir hypothesis (see. 6 ...
... database design and data modeling prevails, the number of classes required to model any domain and to build any application in that domain explodes.4 Another sign of the ascendancy of traditional thinking over object thinking will be a ...
... databases instead of algorithms, flow charts, and data-flow diagrams—has been the most successful of the five thinking innovations, although most developers still think procedurally when writing code. Both software engineering and ...
... databases), it's given time to overcome its limitations (or those limitations are ignored, and the innovation is used in spite of them). Note The same forces that are bringing XP to the forefront of software development have generated a ...
... database developers precisely because it required them to cross language family lines. Unless the programmer also learns a great deal of idiom and convention (not included in the formal syntax of the language or even in its libraries) ...
Saturs
1 | |
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 |