000 04249nam a22002057a 4500
005 20220131222920.0
008 220131s1900 ii ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
040 _cOCLC
100 _aBooch
_910368
245 _aObject-Oriented Analysis and Design with Applications /
_cBooch.
250 _a2nd ed.
260 _bPearson Education Inc ;
_c1900.
300 _a721 p.
505 _aTable of contents : Cover13; -- Contents -- Sidebars -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- About the Authors -- Section I: Concepts -- Chapter 1 Complexity -- 1.1 The Structure of Complex Systems -- 1.2 The Inherent Complexity of Software -- 1.3 The Five Attributes of a Complex System -- 1.4 Organized and Disorganized Complexity -- 1.5 Bringing Order to Chaos -- 1.6 On Designing Complex Systems -- Chapter 2 The Object Model -- 2.1 The Evolution of the Object Model -- 2.2 Foundations of the Object Model -- 2.3 Elements of the Object Model -- 2.4 Applying the Object Model -- Chapter 3 Classes and Objects -- 3.1 The Nature of an Object -- 3.2 Relationships among Objects -- 3.3 The Nature of a Class -- 3.4 Relationships among Classes -- 3.5 The Interplay of Classes and Objects -- 3.6 On Building Quality Classes and Objects -- Chapter 4 Classification -- 4.1 The Importance of Proper Classification -- 4.2 Identifying Classes and Objects -- 4.3 Key Abstractions and Mechanisms -- Section II: Method -- Chapter 5 Notation -- 5.1 The Unified Modeling Language -- 5.2 Package Diagrams -- 5.3 Component Diagrams -- 5.4 Deployment Diagrams -- 5.5 Use Case Diagrams -- 5.6 Activity Diagrams -- 5.7 Class Diagrams -- 5.8 Sequence Diagrams -- 5.9 Interaction Overview Diagrams -- 5.10 Composite Structure Diagrams -- 5.11 State Machine Diagrams -- 5.12 Timing Diagrams -- 5.13 Object Diagrams -- 5.14 Communication Diagrams -- Chapter 6 Process -- 6.1 First Principles -- 6.2 The Macro Process: The Software Development Lifecycle -- 6.3 The Micro Process: The Analysis and Design Process -- Chapter 7 Pragmatics -- 7.1 Management and Planning -- 7.2 Staffing -- 7.3 Release Management -- 7.4 Reuse -- 7.5 Quality Assurance and Metrics -- 7.6 Documentation -- 7.7 Tools -- 7.8 Special Topics -- 7.9 The Benefits and Risks of Object-Oriented Development -- Section III: Applications -- Chapter 8 System Architecture: Satellite-Based Navigation -- 8.1 Inception -- 8.2 Elaboration -- 8.3 Construction -- 8.4 Post-Transition -- Chapter 9 Control System: Traffic Management -- 9.1 Inception -- 9.2 Elaboration -- 9.3 Construction -- 9.4 Post-Transition -- Chapter 10 Artificial Intelligence: Cryptanalysis -- 10.1 Inception -- 10.2 Elaboration -- 10.3 Construction -- 10.4 Post-Transition -- Chapter 11 Data Acquisition: Weather Monitoring Station -- 11.1 Inception -- 11.2 Elaboration -- 11.3 Construction -- 11.4 Post-Transition -- Chapter 12 Web Application: Vacation Tracking System -- 12.1 Inception -- 12.2 Elaboration -- 12.3 Construction -- 12.4 Transition and Post-Transition -- Appendix A: Object-Oriented Programming Languages -- A.1 Language Evolution -- A.2 Smalltalk -- A.3 C++ -- A.4 Java -- Appendix B: Further Reading -- Notes -- Glossary -- A -- B -- C -- D -- E -- F -- G -- H -- I -- K -- L -- M -- O -- P -- Q -- R -- S -- T -- U -- V -- Classified Bibliography -- Index -- A -- B -- C -- D -- E -- F -- G -- H -- I -- J -- K -- L -- M -- N -- O.
520 _aSummary : Object-Oriented Design with Applications has long been the essential reference to object-oriented technology, which, in turn, has evolved to join the mainstream of industrial-strength software development. In this third edition--the first revision in 13 years--readers can learn to apply object-oriented methods using new paradigms such as Java, the Unified Modeling Language (UML) 2.0, and .NET. The authors draw upon their rich and varied experience to offer improved methods for object development and numerous examples that tackle the complex problems faced by software engineers, including sys.
650 _2OCLC
773 _aPearson eBook
856 _uhttp://classify.oclc.org/classify2/ClassifyDemo?owi=1004797676
942 _2ddc
_cEBK
_y11
_z Priyanka
999 _c4409
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