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Java Modeling Color With Uml: Enterprise Components and Process Textbook Binding – 30 juli 1999
Aankoopopties en uitbreidingen
- Printlengte221 pagina's
- TaalEngels
- UitgeverPearson
- Publicatiedatum30 juli 1999
- Afmetingen20.96 x 2.54 x 26.04 cm
- ISBN-10013011510X
- ISBN-13978-0130115102
Productgegevens
- Uitgever : Pearson
- Publicatiedatum : 30 juli 1999
- Taal : Engels
- Printlengte : 221 pagina's
- ISBN-10 : 013011510X
- ISBN-13 : 978-0130115102
- Gewicht van item : 930 g
- Afmetingen : 20.96 x 2.54 x 26.04 cm
- Klantenrecensies:
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Michael D. BrownBeoordeeld in de Verenigde Staten op 12 december 20105,0 van 5 sterren Still Relevant and Worth Studying
Formaat: VakboekGeverifieerde aankoopAs a technical author, one of the greatest accomplishments is writing something that is timeless and relevant across technologies. It's unfortunate that the book has Java in the title because .NET developers might pass it by thinking it doesn't apply to them (they'd be wrong). With the current distaste for "big up front design" UML has unjustly been thrown out the window. And thus with the title tying the book to UML, many may pass on the book for that reason at their own peril.
The techniques taught in this book apply to any developer using an object oriented language, regardless of whether or not you're using UML. With the popularity of Eric Evans' Domain Driven Design many developers are taking a domain-first approach to designing their application. JMCU teaches the reader how to approach domain modeling and gain insight into a domain that may not be obvious at first by leveraging the four archetypes. As an added bonus, the authors provide a catalog of domain models that can be used as starter templates for your own domain modeling adventures.
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James C. NormanBeoordeeld in de Verenigde Staten op 17 oktober 20035,0 van 5 sterren Ignore the Java
Formaat: VakboekGeverifieerde aankoopThough "Java" is in the title, this book is not limited to Java, and, indeed, there are no Java code examples. Usage of UML, however is extensive. The book presents an approach to generalizing business components (modelliing patterns - referred to as archetypes) that really helps one to understand the structure and interaction of business components. I use this book as a regular reference. It includes a near-complete business component model through 12 compound components.
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GregBeoordeeld in de Verenigde Staten op 12 juni 20073,0 van 5 sterren Great Concepts but ...
Formaat: VakboekGeverifieerde aankoopThe book's UML diagrams are very necessary for understanding the book but the diagrams are illegible due to the use of miniscule font. The text of the book has a good font but half or more of the pages of the book are UML diagrams.
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Shahram KhorsandBeoordeeld in de Verenigde Staten op 5 juli 20001,0 van 5 sterren Not a book on Java and UML!
Formaat: VakboekGeverifieerde aankoopIf you are looking for a book on Java and UML or a book that is about UML and uses Java examples; This IS NOT THE right book. The authors give you their way of patterns or archetypes that they call it. If you already know UML and what to see if there is other techniques or ways of extending UML this is the right book for you. Another thins about the colors, The idea is new but not a very good one. Often you tend to print you diagrams and show to other people. If you depend on their way of modeling you'll have to get a color printer and since there are text in the colored areas you'll need an expensive printer.
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R. WilliamsBeoordeeld in de Verenigde Staten op 26 september 20004,0 van 5 sterren Don't Be Fooled
Formaat: VakboekGeverifieerde aankoopThe people who trashed this book didn't do much with it, that's clear. When you first go to the book (or if you've seen Coad speak, as I did @ JavaOne), you will think that Mr. Rogers is trying to talk you into teaching you a new way to program w/crayons. I was also struck by the proliferation of classes that Coad advocates. However, I have returned to this book a number of times, in part because Coad's tool Together/J is now the preeminent Java/UML tool, it makes Rational look like a set of tinker toys. This last time, I've become quite enamored with what is going on in here. Here are my suggestions: 1. Really try and understand the DNC (domain neutral component). It is a very good approach to a kind of design completeness theorem that I haven't seen much talk about elsewhere. 2. Look at the diagrams. I look at them over and over again. After going a couple of rounds I found that I was becoming addicted to the visualization process, not merely as a representational apparatus, but as a way of actually doing more work/understanding the work I'd already done.
If you get the 30 day eval of Together/J and you work through understanding the DNC and color, you'll pass into another dimension from which you will not readily want to return. Plain white UML is dimensionless to me now.
All that said, I gave the book a 4 because it really needs an update. The FDD (feature driven development) methodology is not really interesting or appropriate anymore, I think. In the new massively interconnected, distributed component world, features are not what its about anymore, unless you're developing a word processor. Also, the archetypes are based on a non-EJB approach that will change if distributed computing is applied to it, quite significantly. Still this is an important book and combined w/TogetherSoft's tool it's perhaps the best design/UML teaching combo available. There aren't enough books out there that have models for real things in them. This does that and a lot more.
