| Linda Rising - 1998 - 574 lapas
...observations about an entity he calls a pattern, defined as follows: Each pattern describes a problem that occurs over and over again in our environment and...times over without ever doing it the same way twice. ( Alexander et al., 1977, p. x) I have been an active patterns advocate since I attended the OOPSLA... | |
| Ian Smith - 1998 - 518 lapas
...patterns in architectural design [9]. Alexander's pattern "describes a problem which occurs over and over and then describes the core of the solution to that...times over without ever doing it the same way twice" [9]. In analogy to Alexander's patterns, an object-oriented software pattern identifies the participating... | |
| Asuman Dogac, M. Tamer Özsu, Ozgur Ulusoy - 1999 - 292 lapas
...what exactly design patterns are, Gamma uses the definition of the architect Christopher Alexander: "Each pattern describes a problem which occurs over...times over, without ever doing it the same way twice" (Gamma etal., 1995). To make the reuse of design information possible, design patterns are described... | |
| Bhuvan Unhelkar - 1999 - 466 lapas
...patterns as elements of reusable object-oriented software by Gamma et al. 3 ' According to Alexander, "Each pattern describes a problem which occurs over...times over, without ever doing it the same way twice." Even though Alexander was talking about patterns in buildings and towns, it is also true about object-oriented... | |
| Yogesh Malhotra - 2000 - 408 lapas
...new problem was first noted by Alexander. He stated that ". . .each pattern describes a problem that occurs over and over again in our environment and...times over without ever doing it the same way twice" (Alexander et al., 1977). A pattern is a piece of literature; it tells a story and engages the reader.... | |
| Jean Vanderdonckt, Christelle Farenc - 2000 - 392 lapas
...between a certain context, a problem, and a solution". He goes on explaining the nature of a pattern; "Each pattern describes a problem which occurs over...you can use this solution a million times over...". From these explanations it shows that patterns are very practical, they describe instances of "good"... | |
| Marco Winckler, Hilary Johnson, Philippe Palanque - 2007 - 299 lapas
...proposed by Christopher Alexander in the domain of urban architecture [1, 2]. According to Alexander a pattern describes "... a problem which occurs over...can use this solution a million times over, without doing it the same way twice." [2]. The pattern concept was quickly adapted to other domains. First... | |
| Diethelm Bienhaus - 2000 - 308 lapas
...den Bereich der Softwareentwicklung. Alexander et al. (1977) erläutern den Begriff Muster wie folgt: "Each pattern describes a problem which occurs over...environment, and then describes the core of the solution to t hat problem, in such a way that you can use this solution a million times over, without ever doing... | |
| Michitaka Hirose - 2001 - 1312 lapas
...notations describe a problem, which occurs and reoccurs again in our environment, and then describe the core of the solution to that problem in such a way that one could use this solution many times over. With usability patterns we can also capture requirements... | |
| Laurie Williams, Robert R. Kessler - 2003 - 292 lapas
...a building architect, Christopher Alexander (Alexander et al. 1977). Alexander describes a pattern: "Each pattern describes a problem which occurs over...times over, without ever doing it the same way twice." Considering Alexander's description of patterns, organizational patterns are patterns applied to organizations,... | |
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