Catálogo de publicaciones - libros

Compartir en
redes sociales


Multimedia Introduction to Programming Using Java

David Gries Paul Gries

Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial

No disponible.

Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial

No disponibles.

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

Información

Tipo de recurso:

libros

ISBN impreso

978-0-387-22681-1

ISBN electrónico

978-0-387-26934-4

Editor responsable

Springer Nature

País de edición

Reino Unido

Fecha de publicación

Información sobre derechos de publicación

© David Gries and Paul Gries 2005

Tabla de contenidos

Exception Handling

David Gries; Paul Gries

E-business systems are increasingly being developed as nTier architectures. This approach best separates the human-computer interaction (HCI) concerns from those of the system’s information content, thus allowing software developers to focus on one without being muddled by the other. Contemporary practice accordingly uses an Object Oriented language with a relational database providing the persistent storage mechanism. It is however well known that object-orientation and relational databases do not sit easily together. Secondly the rewriting of an object’s class can cause all the other object classes that it interacts with having to be rewritten in turn, with its consequential knock on effects throughout the application. Through its unifying framework, semiotic offers the optimal way to record an objects’ evolution and reconcile the data vs. object divide, and suggests how this might be achieved. (NB: At http://www.polovina.me.uk/publications/os6-full-paper.pdf is the complete version of this paper, including further reference sources.)

Part II - Other Java Constructs | Pp. 313-328

Packages

David Gries; Paul Gries

E-business systems are increasingly being developed as nTier architectures. This approach best separates the human-computer interaction (HCI) concerns from those of the system’s information content, thus allowing software developers to focus on one without being muddled by the other. Contemporary practice accordingly uses an Object Oriented language with a relational database providing the persistent storage mechanism. It is however well known that object-orientation and relational databases do not sit easily together. Secondly the rewriting of an object’s class can cause all the other object classes that it interacts with having to be rewritten in turn, with its consequential knock on effects throughout the application. Through its unifying framework, semiotic offers the optimal way to record an objects’ evolution and reconcile the data vs. object divide, and suggests how this might be achieved. (NB: At http://www.polovina.me.uk/publications/os6-full-paper.pdf is the complete version of this paper, including further reference sources.)

Part II - Other Java Constructs | Pp. 329-334

Interfaces and Nested Classes

David Gries; Paul Gries

E-business systems are increasingly being developed as nTier architectures. This approach best separates the human-computer interaction (HCI) concerns from those of the system’s information content, thus allowing software developers to focus on one without being muddled by the other. Contemporary practice accordingly uses an Object Oriented language with a relational database providing the persistent storage mechanism. It is however well known that object-orientation and relational databases do not sit easily together. Secondly the rewriting of an object’s class can cause all the other object classes that it interacts with having to be rewritten in turn, with its consequential knock on effects throughout the application. Through its unifying framework, semiotic offers the optimal way to record an objects’ evolution and reconcile the data vs. object divide, and suggests how this might be achieved. (NB: At http://www.polovina.me.uk/publications/os6-full-paper.pdf is the complete version of this paper, including further reference sources.)

Part II - Other Java Constructs | Pp. 335-364

Programming Style

David Gries; Paul Gries

E-business systems are increasingly being developed as nTier architectures. This approach best separates the human-computer interaction (HCI) concerns from those of the system’s information content, thus allowing software developers to focus on one without being muddled by the other. Contemporary practice accordingly uses an Object Oriented language with a relational database providing the persistent storage mechanism. It is however well known that object-orientation and relational databases do not sit easily together. Secondly the rewriting of an object’s class can cause all the other object classes that it interacts with having to be rewritten in turn, with its consequential knock on effects throughout the application. Through its unifying framework, semiotic offers the optimal way to record an objects’ evolution and reconcile the data vs. object divide, and suggests how this might be achieved. (NB: At http://www.polovina.me.uk/publications/os6-full-paper.pdf is the complete version of this paper, including further reference sources.)

Part III - Aspects of Programming | Pp. 367-384

Testing and Debugging

David Gries; Paul Gries

E-business systems are increasingly being developed as nTier architectures. This approach best separates the human-computer interaction (HCI) concerns from those of the system’s information content, thus allowing software developers to focus on one without being muddled by the other. Contemporary practice accordingly uses an Object Oriented language with a relational database providing the persistent storage mechanism. It is however well known that object-orientation and relational databases do not sit easily together. Secondly the rewriting of an object’s class can cause all the other object classes that it interacts with having to be rewritten in turn, with its consequential knock on effects throughout the application. Through its unifying framework, semiotic offers the optimal way to record an objects’ evolution and reconcile the data vs. object divide, and suggests how this might be achieved. (NB: At http://www.polovina.me.uk/publications/os6-full-paper.pdf is the complete version of this paper, including further reference sources.)

Part III - Aspects of Programming | Pp. 385-401

Recursion

David Gries; Paul Gries

E-business systems are increasingly being developed as nTier architectures. This approach best separates the human-computer interaction (HCI) concerns from those of the system’s information content, thus allowing software developers to focus on one without being muddled by the other. Contemporary practice accordingly uses an Object Oriented language with a relational database providing the persistent storage mechanism. It is however well known that object-orientation and relational databases do not sit easily together. Secondly the rewriting of an object’s class can cause all the other object classes that it interacts with having to be rewritten in turn, with its consequential knock on effects throughout the application. Through its unifying framework, semiotic offers the optimal way to record an objects’ evolution and reconcile the data vs. object divide, and suggests how this might be achieved. (NB: At http://www.polovina.me.uk/publications/os6-full-paper.pdf is the complete version of this paper, including further reference sources.)

Part III - Aspects of Programming | Pp. 403-434

Applications and Applets

David Gries; Paul Gries

E-business systems are increasingly being developed as nTier architectures. This approach best separates the human-computer interaction (HCI) concerns from those of the system’s information content, thus allowing software developers to focus on one without being muddled by the other. Contemporary practice accordingly uses an Object Oriented language with a relational database providing the persistent storage mechanism. It is however well known that object-orientation and relational databases do not sit easily together. Secondly the rewriting of an object’s class can cause all the other object classes that it interacts with having to be rewritten in turn, with its consequential knock on effects throughout the application. Through its unifying framework, semiotic offers the optimal way to record an objects’ evolution and reconcile the data vs. object divide, and suggests how this might be achieved. (NB: At http://www.polovina.me.uk/publications/os6-full-paper.pdf is the complete version of this paper, including further reference sources.)

Part III - Aspects of Programming | Pp. 435-444

GUIs

David Gries; Paul Gries

E-business systems are increasingly being developed as nTier architectures. This approach best separates the human-computer interaction (HCI) concerns from those of the system’s information content, thus allowing software developers to focus on one without being muddled by the other. Contemporary practice accordingly uses an Object Oriented language with a relational database providing the persistent storage mechanism. It is however well known that object-orientation and relational databases do not sit easily together. Secondly the rewriting of an object’s class can cause all the other object classes that it interacts with having to be rewritten in turn, with its consequential knock on effects throughout the application. Through its unifying framework, semiotic offers the optimal way to record an objects’ evolution and reconcile the data vs. object divide, and suggests how this might be achieved. (NB: At http://www.polovina.me.uk/publications/os6-full-paper.pdf is the complete version of this paper, including further reference sources.)

Part III - Aspects of Programming | Pp. 445-478