Home   FAQs   New Arrivals   Specials   Pricing & Shipping   Location   Corporate Services   Why Choose Bookware?  
 Search:   
Call our store: 9922 6266 (from within Sydney) or 1800 734 567 (from outside Sydney)
 View Cart   Check Out   
 
Browse by Subject
 Nepean TAFE 2012
I.T
 .NET
 Windows 7
 Adobe CS5
 Cisco
 CCNA 2012
 CCNP 2012
 Java
 VB
 ASP
 Web Design
 E-Commerce
 Project Management
 ITIL
 Macintosh
 Linux
 Windows Server 2008
 SAP
 Sharepoint 2010
Certification
 MCITP
 MCTS
Economics and Business
 Accounting
 Business Information Systems
 Economics
 Finance
 Management
 Marketing
 TAX
 Human Resources
Academic
 Law
 Nursing
 Medical

Enterprise Patterns and MDA: Building Better Software with Archetype Patterns and UML

by: Jim Arlow Ila Neustadt

Notify me when in stock

On-line Price: $67.95 (includes GST)

Paperback package 528

20%Off Retail Price

You save: $17.00

TBA - Subject to Change. Price/availability/options for all orders will be confirmed by reply email before processing.
_____________________
N.Sydney : On Order (reserve your copy)

Retail Price: $84.95

Publisher: ,2003/12/02

Category: UML Level:

ISBN: 032111230X
ISBN13: 9780321112309

Add to Shopping Cart

Summary


      'The burgeoning field of Model Driven Architecture tools and worldwide support for the Unified Modeling Language are finally being met with high-quality books that explain standard modeling techniques in a way any developer can follow. This book meets an urgent need squarely and clearly, and explains with copious examples a powerful approach to building usable (and reusable!) assets and applications. Every enterprise developer needs this book.'

--Richard Mark Soley, Ph.D., Chairman and CEO, Object Management Group

This book is a practical guide to applying Model Driven Architecture (MDA) and patterns in order to create business applications more easily. It provides you with a proven catalog of archetype patterns: high-value model components that can be easily incorporated into Unified Modeling Language (UML) models. Each archetype pattern allows you to understand and model a specific part of an enterprise system.


  Enterprise Patterns and MDA teaches you how to customize any archetype pattern--such as Customer, Product, and Order--to reflect the idiosyncrasies of your own business environment. Because all the patterns work harmoniously together and have clearly documented relationships to each other, you'll come away with a host of reusable solutions to common problems in business-software design.


  This book shows you how using a pattern or a fragment of a pattern can save you months of work and help you avoid costly errors. You'll also discover how--when used in literate modeling--patterns can solve the difficult challenge of communicating UML models to broad audiences.


  The configurable patterns can be used manually to create executable code. However, the authors draw on their extensive experience to show you how to tap the significant power of MDA and UML for maximum automation. Not surprisingly, the patterns included in this book are highly valuable; a blue-chip company recently valued a similar, but less mature, set of patterns at hundreds of thousands of dollars.


  Use this practical guide to increase the efficiency of your designs and to create robust business applications that can be applied immediately in a business setting.


          032111230XB11202003


  Author Bio


      Since 1990, Jim Arlow has been programming and designing object-oriented systems, including object models, for companies such as Credit Suisse First Boston and British Airways. A respected object-oriented consultant, he has written and delivered training courses in London, Frankfurt, and Zurich. Jim is a regular speaker at conferences such as Object World and has been a guest speaker at City University, London, and the British Computer Society.


  Over her twenty years working in British Airways' IT Department, Ila Neustadt has gained experience in all phases of the development lifecycle. She developed the company's data-quality methodology and analyzed and formalized its approach to developing business and system architectures.


          032111230XAB11202003

Table of Contents

Introduction.


        1 Archetypes and Archetype Patterns.


        2 Model Driven Architecture with Archetype Patterns.


        3 Literate Modeling.


        4 Party Archetype Pattern.


        5 Party Relationship Archetype Pattern.


        6 Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Archetype Pattern.


        7 Product Archetype Pattern.


        8 Inventory Archetype Pattern.


        9 Order Archetype Pattern.


      10 Quantity Archetype Pattern.


      11 Money Archetype Pattern.


      12 Rule Archetype Pattern.


      13 Summary.


      Archetype Glossary.


      Bibliography.