This book, meant to serve as a textbook on the subject, provides a comprehensive introduction to OOAD. The salient points of its coverage are: A sound footing on object-oriented concepts such as classes, objects, interfaces, inheritance, polymorphism, dynamic linking, etc. A good introduction to the stage of requirements analysis. Use of UML to document user requirements and design. An extensive treatment of the design process. Coverage of implementation issues. Appropriate use of design and architectural patterns. Introduction to the art and craft of refactoring. Pointers to resources that further the reader's knowledge. The book stresses on implementation aspects, without which learning is incomplete. This is achieved through case studies. The case study of a library system is carried through most of the book and it is using this that the various concepts of analysis and design are introduced. Thus, the theory is never separate from the implementation aspect and hence the learning is more meaningful. All the main case studies used in this book have been implemented by the authors using Java. The text is liberally peppered with snippets of code, which are short, fairly self-explanatory and easy to read. The appendix on Java has a short tutorial on the language, which is a quick guide to understanding the implementation aspects of the code in the book. This book, meant to serve as a textbook on the subject, provides a comprehensive introduction to OOAD. The salient points of its coverage are: A sound footing on object-oriented concepts such as classes, objects, interfaces, inheritance, polymorphism, dynamic linking, etc. A good introduction to the stage of requirements analysis. Use of UML to document user requirements and design. An extensive treatment of the design process. Coverage of implementation issues. Appropriate use of design and architectural patterns. Introduction to the art and craft of refactoring. Pointers to resources that further the reader's knowledge. The book stresses on implementation aspects, without which learning is incomplete. This is achieved through case studies. The case study of a library system is carried through most of the book and it is using this that the various concepts of analysis and design are introduced. Thus, the theory is never separate from the implementation aspect and hence the learning is more meaningful. All the main case studies used in this book have been implemented by the authors using Java. The text is liberally peppered with snippets of code, which are short, fairly self-explanatory and easy to read. The appendix on Java has a short tutorial on the language, which is a quick guide to understanding the implementation aspects of the code in the book.
"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.
The second edition of this textbook includes revisions based on the feedback on the first edition. In a new chapter the authors provide a concise introduction to the remainder of UML diagrams, adopting the same holistic approach as the first edition.
Using a case-study-based approach for providing a comprehensive introduction to the principles of object-oriented design, it includes:
The focus of the book is on implementation aspects, without which the learning is incomplete. This is achieved through the use of case studies for introducing the various concepts of analysis and design, ensuring that the theory is never separate from the implementation aspects.
All the main case studies used in this book have been implemented by the authors using Java. An appendix on Java provides a useful short tutorial on the language.
Brahma Dathan is an associate professor in the Department of Information and Computer Sciences at Metropolitan State University, Minnesota. He obtained his BS in engineering with special focus on electronics and communication from the University of Kerala, MTech in computer science from IIT Madras and PhD in computer science from University of Pittsburgh.
Sarnath Ramnath received his BTech and MTech degrees from IIT Delhi in 1984 and 1987 respectively, and his PhD in Computer Science from SUNY, Buffalo, in 1994. His areas of interest include algorithm analysis and design, data-structures, computational geometry and object-oriented software design. He is currently Professor and Chair of the Department of Computer Science at Minnesota State University, St Cloud, Minnesota, USA.
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.
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