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Electrostatic Accelerators: Fundamentals and Applications

Ragnar Hellborg (eds.)

Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial

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Disponibilidad
Institución detectada Año de publicación Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada 2005 SpringerLink

Información

Tipo de recurso:

libros

ISBN impreso

978-3-540-23983-3

ISBN electrónico

978-3-540-27095-9

Editor responsable

Springer Nature

País de edición

Reino Unido

Fecha de publicación

Información sobre derechos de publicación

© Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2005

Cobertura temática

Tabla de contenidos

Atomic Structure

L.J. Curtis; I. Martinson

In this chapter you learned about the details of .NET Remoting-based applications. You now know how lifetime is managed and how you can dynamically configure an object’s time to live. If this doesn’t suffice, implementing client- or server-side sponsors gives you the opportunity to manage an object’s lifetime independently of any TTLs.

You also read about versioning, and you can now look at the whole application’s lifecycle over various versions and know what to watch out for in regard to SAOs and CAOs, and know how the ISerializable interface can help you when using [Serializable] objects.

On the last pages of this chapter, you read about how you can use delegates and events, and what to take care of when designing an application that relies on these features. In particular, you learned that using [OneWay] event handlers the intuitive way certainly isn’t the best practice.

You should now be able to solve most challenges that might confront you during design and development of a .NET Remoting application. In the next two chapters, I will share some additional tips, best practices, and troubleshooting guides that you should take into account before designing your .NET Remoting-based solution.

Part III - Research Fields and Their Technical Requirements | Pp. 560-580

Industrial Electron Accelerators

M. Letournel

In this chapter you learned about the details of .NET Remoting-based applications. You now know how lifetime is managed and how you can dynamically configure an object’s time to live. If this doesn’t suffice, implementing client- or server-side sponsors gives you the opportunity to manage an object’s lifetime independently of any TTLs.

You also read about versioning, and you can now look at the whole application’s lifecycle over various versions and know what to watch out for in regard to SAOs and CAOs, and know how the ISerializable interface can help you when using [Serializable] objects.

On the last pages of this chapter, you read about how you can use delegates and events, and what to take care of when designing an application that relies on these features. In particular, you learned that using [OneWay] event handlers the intuitive way certainly isn’t the best practice.

You should now be able to solve most challenges that might confront you during design and development of a .NET Remoting application. In the next two chapters, I will share some additional tips, best practices, and troubleshooting guides that you should take into account before designing your .NET Remoting-based solution.

Part III - Research Fields and Their Technical Requirements | Pp. 581-593