Model-Driven Design Using Business Patterns
(Sprache: Englisch)
This book shows how to apply pattern ideas in business applications. It explains the REA patterns and details how to apply more than 20 business patterns for business application. It further shows how to find business objects and related modeling elements.
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This book shows how to apply pattern ideas in business applications. It explains the REA patterns and details how to apply more than 20 business patterns for business application. It further shows how to find business objects and related modeling elements.
Klappentext zu „Model-Driven Design Using Business Patterns “
This book shows how to apply pattern ideas in business applications. It presents more than 20 structural and behavioral business patterns that use the REA (resources, events, agents) pattern as a common backbone. The developer working on business frameworks can use the patterns to derive the right abstractions and to design and ensure that the meta-rules are followed by the developers of the actual applications. The application developer can use these patterns to design a business application, to ensure that it does not violate the domain rules, and to adapt the application to changing requirements without the need to change the overall architecture.
Business applications are designed using profound knowledge about the business domain, such as domain objects, fundamental domain-related principles, and domain patterns. Nonetheless, the pattern community's ideas for software engineering have not impacted at the application level, they are still mostly used for technical problems.
This book takes exactly this step: it shows you how to apply the pattern ideas in business applications and presents more than 20 structural and behavioral business patterns that use the REA (resources, events, agents) pattern as a common backbone. If you are a developer working on business frameworks, you can use the patterns presented to derive the right abstractions (e.g., business objects) and to design and ensure that the meta-rules (e.g., process patterns) are followed by the developers of the actual applications. And if you are an application developer, you can use these patterns to design your business application, to ensure that it does not violate the domain rules, and to adapt the application to changing requirements without the need to change the overall architecture. As with patterns in general, this approach allows for both more flexible and more solid software architectures and hence better software quality.
This book takes exactly this step: it shows you how to apply the pattern ideas in business applications and presents more than 20 structural and behavioral business patterns that use the REA (resources, events, agents) pattern as a common backbone. If you are a developer working on business frameworks, you can use the patterns presented to derive the right abstractions (e.g., business objects) and to design and ensure that the meta-rules (e.g., process patterns) are followed by the developers of the actual applications. And if you are an application developer, you can use these patterns to design your business application, to ensure that it does not violate the domain rules, and to adapt the application to changing requirements without the need to change the overall architecture. As with patterns in general, this approach allows for both more flexible and more solid software architectures and hence better software quality.
Inhaltsverzeichnis zu „Model-Driven Design Using Business Patterns “
Part One: Structural Patterns. Structural Patterns at Operational Level- What is REA?- Benefits of Domain Ontology
- REA Business Patterns
- REA Value Chain
- Structural Patterns at Policy Level
- Groups
- Types
- Difference between Types and Groups
- Commitment
- Contract
- Schedule
- Policy
- Linkage
- Responsibility
- Custody
Part Two: Behavioral Patterns. Identification
- Classification
- Location
- Posting
- Account
- Materialized Claim
- Reconciliation
- Due Date
- Description
- Notification
- Note
- Value
- How to Discover New Behavioral Patterns
Part Three: Model-Driven Development of Software Applications. Executable Model
- Level of Specificity of the Model
- Models in Various Domains
Part Four: Modeling Handbook. Elementary Exchanges
- Elementary Conversions
- Combined Models
- Contracts
- Appendix: Principles of Business Modeling
Autoren-Porträt von Pavel Hruby
Pavel Hruby works at Microsoft Development Center Copenhagen in Denmark as part of an architecture team developing the framework for next-generation business software applications that exploit business patterns as one of their primary modeling abstractions. Pavel's experience includes the application of patterns in object-oriented frameworks, models, and model transformations. He is active in the patterns community, is a member of the Hillside Group and Hillside Europe, and was a chairman of VikingPLoP 2002, the First Nordic Conference on Pattern Languages of Programs.
Bibliographische Angaben
- Autor: Pavel Hruby
- 2006, 368 Seiten, 285 Schwarz-Weiß-Abbildungen, Maße: 16,5 x 24,3 cm, Gebunden, Englisch
- Verlag: Springer
- ISBN-10: 3540301542
- ISBN-13: 9783540301547
- Erscheinungsdatum: 22.06.2006
Sprache:
Englisch
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