The authors describe a range of techniques, notations, principles, and procedures that will be useful to software developers using any kind of object-oriented analysis or design method. The book will help readers to think more clearly about what their object-oriented descriptions and notations mean
Designing Object Systems: Object-Oriented Modelling with Syntropy
โ Scribed by Steve Cook, John Daniels
- Publisher
- Prentice Hall
- Year
- 1994
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 408
- Edition
- 1st
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
The authors present a "second-generation" method, which draws from the best of "first-generation" object-oriented analysis and design methods. The method set out in the book, Syntropy, is distinguished in the following ways - careful distinctions are drawn about what is being modelled and why; all of the notations can be precisely related to each other; a great deal of semantic reasoning and checking is possible; a full treatment of concurrency is provided; and techniques for partitioning models are described. This book is designed to equip the reader with a complete set of techniques for building large and complex interactive software systems. The primary graphical notations used are variants of OMT (the Rumbaugh object modelling notation), Harel statecharts, and Booch mechanisms.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
If you re an ABAP application developer with basic ABAP programming skills, this book will teach you how to think about writing ABAP software from an object-oriented (OO) point of view, and prepare you to work with many of the exciting ABAP-based technologies in ABAP Objects (release 7.0). Using th