Java modeling in color with UML : enterprise components and process

著者

書誌事項

Java modeling in color with UML : enterprise components and process

Peter Coad, Eric Lefebvre, Jedd De Luca

Prentice Hall PTR, 1999

大学図書館所蔵 件 / 4

この図書・雑誌をさがす

注記

Includes bibliographical references and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

This is the first book to teach software design in color. Peter Coad and his co-authors use four colors to represent four "archetypes": forms that appear repeatedly in effective component and object models. Given a color, you'll know the kind of attributes, links, methods, and interactions that class is likely to have. Using these color "building blocks," you can build better models for any business. Coad's team plugs these archetypes into a 12-class domain-neutral component that reflects his unparalleled modeling experience. The book delivers 47 ready-to-use, domain-specific components, each designed to help you build better models and apps. Finally, the authors introduce Feature-Driven Development, a new process for getting the most out of Java modeling and development. It's like having Peter Coad at your side, guiding you towards more effective design!

目次

1. Archetypes, Color, and the Domain-Neutral Component. Archetypes. Color. The Four Archetypes in Color. Given a Class, What's the Color, What's the Archetype? The Domain-Neutral Component. Interactions Within the Domain-Neutral Component. Component Connectivity. Twelve Compound Components. Suggested Reading Paths. Summary. 2. Make or Buy. Material-Resource Management. Facility Management. Manufacturing Management. Inventory Management. 3. Sell. Product-Sale Management. Cash-Sale Management. Customer-Account Management. 4. Relate. Human Resource Management. Relationship Management. 5. Coordinate and Support. Project-Activity Management. Accounting Management. Document Management. 6. Feature-Driven Development. The Problem: Accommodating Shorter and Shorter Business Cycles. The Solution: Feature-Driven Development. Defining Feature Sets and Features. Establishing a Process: Why and How. The Five Processes within FDD. Chief Programmers, Class Owners, and Feature Teams. Tracking Progress with Precision. Summary and Conclusion. Appendix A: Archetypes in Color. Appendix B: Modeling Tips. Appendix C: Notation. Index.

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