Главная    Ex Libris    Книги    Журналы    Статьи    Серии    Каталог    Wanted    Загрузка    ХудЛит    Справка    Поиск по индексам    Поиск    Форум   
blank
Авторизация

       
blank
Поиск по указателям

blank
blank
blank
Красота
blank
Rosenberg D., Stephens M. — Use Case Driven Object Modeling with UML: Theory and Practice
Rosenberg D., Stephens M. — Use Case Driven Object Modeling with UML: Theory and Practice



Обсудите книгу на научном форуме



Нашли опечатку?
Выделите ее мышкой и нажмите Ctrl+Enter


Название: Use Case Driven Object Modeling with UML: Theory and Practice

Авторы: Rosenberg D., Stephens M.

Аннотация:

Use Case Driven Object Modeling with UMLTheory and Practice shows how to drive an object-oriented software design from use case all the way through coding and testing, based on the minimalist, UML-based ICONIX process. In addition to a comprehensive explanation of the foundations of the approach, the book makes extensive use of examples and provides exercises at the back of each chapter.

This book leads by example. It demonstrates common analysis and design errors, shows how to detect and fix them, and suggests how to avoid making the same errors in the future. The book also encourages you to examine its UML examples and to search for specific errors. You'll get clues, then later receive the answers during "review sessions" toward the end of the book.


Язык: en

Рубрика: Технология/

Статус предметного указателя: Готов указатель с номерами страниц

ed2k: ed2k stats

Год издания: 2007

Количество страниц: 475

Добавлена в каталог: 30.12.2007

Операции: Положить на полку | Скопировать ссылку для форума | Скопировать ID
blank
Предметный указатель
AbstractCommandController class      274
Acceptance testing      333
Acegi Security      179
Actors as external to the system      54
Actors as fulfilling several roles      54
Actors, adding a Customer actor to a robustness diagram      117
Actors, modeling external systems as      35
Actors, placing on use case diagrams      32
Actors, representing nonhuman external systems      54
Actors, roles of, in use case diagrams      53
Add External Books to Catalog use case      128 218
Adding operations to domain objects      4
addToPendingReviewsQueue()      284
AddToShoppingCartTest test case      340
Advices      74
Aggregation (has-a) relationship      24 27 33
Algorithms, differentiating from use cases      76
Alternate courses, displaying in a different color on robustness diagrams      110
Alternate courses, Login use case, example robustness diagram      110
Alternate courses, modeling in a robustness diagram      122
Analysis and preliminary design phase      3 9
Analysis paralysis      175
Anemic domain model      242
Architectural layering, architectural diagrams, examples of      162
Architectural layering, definition of      162
Architectural layering, horizontal vs. vertical layers      163
Architectural layering, UML class diagrams      164
Architectural paralysis      180
Arrows as communication associations on robustness diagrams      108
Arrows, showing data flow or control flow      108
aspect-oriented programming (AOP)      74
Aspect-oriented programming (AOP) as extending object-oriented programming (OOP)      171
Aspect-oriented programming (AOP), defining cross-cutting concerns through code      171
Aspect-oriented programming (AOP), problems with      172
Assert methods, in JUnit      339
AssertEquals(), arguments used      340
Attributes, discordant      205
Avoiding dysfunctional requirements      6
Beck, Kent      351
Behavioral requirements      3—4 7
Beizer, Boris      334
beta testing      333
BillyBob 2.0, requirements for      379
Book class as an unused object on a sequence diagram      246
Book class, distribution of responsibilities in      238
Book.java, code example      266
BookDao      243 255
Bookdetails.jsp      274 277
BookDetailsCommand      240
BookDetailsController      240 243 272—273 275 305 359—360 362
Bookstore-servlet.xml      287 290 315 419—421
Bookstore.css      265
Boundary objects      8 187
Boundary objects, definition of      103
Boundary objects, disambiguated nomenclature of      108
Boundary objects, referencing by name in use cases      52 61
Boundary objects, treating as nouns      103
Building a project glossary      7
callTestHandle()      365
Carnegie Mellon Software Engineering Institute      161
CASE tools      57 105 193 203 260
CDR guidelines      15
checkBookFound()      358
checkRating()      319
checkReviewLength()      318
checkTitleLength()      318
Class attributes, relationship to database tables      29
class diagrams      4
Class diagrams, adding getters and setters to      211
Class diagrams, conventions of      164
Class diagrams, domain model and      24 28—29
Class diagrams, finishing the updating of      127
Class diagrams, keeping static and dynamic models in sync      211
Class diagrams, tidying up for a clearer layout      255
Class diagrams, updating and refining      210
Class diagrams, using to find errors on sequence diagrams      238
Class notation, types of      27
Classes, allocating behavior to      188
Classes, assigning operations to      125
Classes, distribution of responsibilities among      239
Classes, organizing around key abstractions in the problem domain      28
Classes, relationship to use cases      51
Classes, searching for classes without attributes      236
Classes, subclasses and superclasses      37
Cleaning up the static model      14
Code Review and Model Update guidelines      18
Code Review and Model Update, accumulating boilerplate checklists for future reviews      299—300
Code Review and Model Update, avoiding review and update paralysis      299 301
Code Review and Model Update, breaking down list items into a smaller checklist      299
Code Review and Model Update, catching design or integration issues early      298
Code Review and Model Update, code review vs. code inspection      302
Code Review and Model Update, comparing the code with the design diagrams      298
Code Review and Model Update, conducting a productive code review      301
Code Review and Model Update, creating a high-level list of review items (use case titles)      299
Code Review and Model Update, emailing action points to all participants      299—300
Code Review and Model Update, focusing on error detection, not error correction      299—300
Code Review and Model Update, frequency of      298
Code Review and Model Update, guidelines      299
Code Review and Model Update, keeping the review just formal enough      299 301
Code Review and Model Update, not forgetting the Model Update session      299 301
Code Review and Model Update, preparing for      299
Code Review and Model Update, purpose of      298
Code Review and Model Update, quickly addressing disparities between code and design      303
Code Review and Model Update, reusing objects in the domain model      298
Code Review and Model Update, reviewing code at different levels      299—300
Code Review and Model Update, syncing code with design      297
Code Review and Model Update, updating and refining the static model      298
Code Review and Model Update, using an integrated code/model browser      299 301
Code Review and Model Update, value of up-front design      303
Code Review and Model Update, why code reviews are necessary      302—303
Coding and testing      4 15
Collaboration diagrams, function of      109
Collaboration diagrams, not confusing with robustness diagrams      107—108
Collaboration diagrams, purpose of      107
Command objects, definition of      168
Commenting code      259 262
compatibility testing      333
Constructor Injection      412
Controller interface      412
Controller objects, lack of, on sequence diagrams      187
Controller objects, using sparingly      108
controllers      3 11 412
Controllers as logical software functions      11
Controllers as methods on the boundary and entity classes      109
Controllers as real control objects      11
Controllers, creating test cases for      109
Controllers, definition of      103
Controllers, ensuring proper test coverage for      350
Controllers, names of      120
Controllers, renaming those with the same name on a diagram      345
Controllers, running test cases for data-retrieval controllers      356
Controllers, Show Book Details use case      351
Controllers, treating as verbs      103
Create New Book use case      219
Create New Customer Account use case      128
Critical Design Review (CDR)      4 15
Critical Design Review (CDR), allocating operations to classes appropriately      235—236
Critical Design Review (CDR), centralizing responsibility in a class      240
Critical Design Review (CDR), checking for continuity of messages      234
Critical Design Review (CDR), checking for entity classes without attributes      251
Critical Design Review (CDR), checking that operations are complete and correct      235 237
Critical Design Review (CDR), coupling object-oriented encapsulation with RDD      239
Critical Design Review (CDR), covering both basic and alternate courses of action      235—236
Critical Design Review (CDR), determining if the sequence diagram matches the class diagram      250
Critical Design Review (CDR), discovering unexplored areas in the analysis space      251
Critical Design Review (CDR), distribution of responsibilities in the Book class      238
Critical Design Review (CDR), ensuring that the sequence diagram matches the use case text      234—236
Critical Design Review (CDR), generating and inspecting the code headers for classes      235 237
Critical Design Review (CDR), generating skeleton tests from the robustness diagram      238
Critical Design Review (CDR), guidelines      235
Critical Design Review (CDR), having all patterns reflected on the sequence diagram      235 237
Critical Design Review (CDR), identifying a stable set of abstractions      249
Critical Design Review (CDR), identifying attributes from functional requirements      251
Critical Design Review (CDR), ironing out leaps of logic between objects      234
Critical Design Review (CDR), limiting to designers and developers, not customers      234
Critical Design Review (CDR), minimizing code breakage and refactoring      249
Critical Design Review (CDR), performing a sanity check on the design      235 237
Critical Design Review (CDR), primary goals      234
Critical Design Review (CDR), reviewing the attributes and operations on classes      235—236
Critical Design Review (CDR), reviewing the quality of the design      234
Critical Design Review (CDR), reviewing the test plan for the release      235 237
Critical Design Review (CDR), searching for classes without attributes      236
Critical Design Review (CDR), setting the starting time for      235
Critical Design Review (CDR), Show Book Details use case      238
Critical Design Review (CDR), tracing functional requirements to use cases and classes      235 237
Critical Design Review (CDR), using class diagrams to find errors on sequence diagrams      238
Critical Design Review (CDR), Write Customer Review use case      245
Cross-cutting concerns, extension use cases      74
Cross-cutting concerns, infrastructure use cases      74
Cross-cutting concerns, peer use cases      74
CustomerReview      247 311
CustomerReviewValidator class      311
CustomerSession class      179 287
Data Access Objects (DAOs)      165 169—170 175
Data analysis and reduction, definition of      378
Data capture, definition of      378
Data Definition Language (DDL)      259
Data model      161
Data reporting, definition of      378
Database tables, relationship to class attributes      29
Dependency Injection (DI)      409 412
Deployment model      161 173 175
Design as building the system right      9
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), acceptance testing      333
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), adding a tearDown() method      350
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), AddToShoppingCartTest test case      340
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), adopting a testing mind-set      330
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), aligning tests closely to requirements      331
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), avoiding duplicating alternate course scenarios      369
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), avoiding duplication in tests      343
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), beginning testing before coding      369
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), beta testing      333
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), compatibility testing      333
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), covering basic and alternate courses in scenario testing      331
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), creating a resource in the test method itself      349
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), creating unit tests for each controller on a robustness diagram      330
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), DDT errors, list of      369
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), different types of testing      330
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), discovering alternate courses during      338
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), doing requirement-level verification      331
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), doing scenario-level acceptance testing      331
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), driving unit tests from test cases      338
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), driving unit tests from use cases      330
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), ensuring that each test method tests exactly one thing      342
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), finding and fixing buggy code      370
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), function of      329
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), generating test skeleton code for unit testing      334
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), guidelines      330
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), identifying and targeting “test hot spots”      370
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), identifying test cases using robustness diagrams      329 334
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), identifying the test scenarios for each controller/test case      335
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), integration testing      333
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), keeping unit tests fine-grained      331 342
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), linking one test case to each controller      336
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), mapping test cases directly to JUnit test classes      339
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), mock objects, testing with      354
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), neglecting to fix a failing test      343
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), nonfunctional requirements testing      333
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), not writing tests that connect to external resources      353
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), performance testing      334
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), practice questions to test your knowledge      370—371
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), preparing for, during the analysis stage      329
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), programmers’ attitudes toward      331
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), proving a test by trying to make it fail      348
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), regression testing      334
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), release testing      333
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), running tests from a test suite      350
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), stress testing      334
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), system testing      333
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), testing paralysis      370
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), transforming a robustness diagram into a test case diagram      334
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), treating unit test code with reverence      342
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), tying closely to requirements      329
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), tying unit tests to the preliminary design objects      342
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), understanding the tests required at each life cycle stage      331
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), unit test skeletons, guidelines for creating      338
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), unit testing      332
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), using a testing framework      331
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), using a traceability matrix      331
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), using mock objects sparingly      343 369
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), using the Agile ICONIX/EA add-in to generate diagrams      336
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), using “realize” connectors      334
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), volume testing      334
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), why bother with designing unit tests      366
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), writing effective unit tests      342—343
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), writing tests from the calling object’s point of view      338 347 358
Design-Driven Testing (DDT), writing tests to validate and hone the design      369
Detailed design phase      3 12 186
Discordant attributes      205
DispatcherServlet      167 174—176 178 269 271 306 347 415—416 419
Display Book Not Found page controller      345
Display controllers, initialization behavior and      111
Display controllers, necessity for, on robustness diagrams      111
DisplayBookDetailsPageTest      365
doesBookIDExist()      247
Domain classes      7 24 27 30
Domain classes, candidates for the Internet Bookstore      33
Domain classes, referencing by name in use cases      52 59
Domain model      11
Domain model diagrams, creating      33 35
Domain model diagrams, ensuring coverage of the problem domain      85
Domain model diagrams, showing generalization and aggregation relationships      86
Domain model diagrams, using a link class      86
Domain model, assumed to be incomplete      28
Domain model, class diagrams and      24 28—29
Domain model, creating before use cases      29
Domain model, definition of      24
Domain model, deliberate simplicity of      29
Domain model, disambiguating      29
Domain model, domain classes and      24 30
Domain model, feeding updated information and changes back into      51
Domain model, identifying attributes to be added to classes      125
Domain model, not mistaking for a data model      28
Domain model, refining and updating throughout a project      23
Domain model, relationship to use cases      25
Domain model, removing UI elements from      32
Domain model, showing aggregation and generalization relationships      24 27
Domain model, updating after identifying a new domain object      122
Domain model, updating incrementally while drawing robustness diagrams      125
Domain model, using as a project glossary      24 26 29
Domain model, when to update      51
Domain modeling      3
Domain modeling, creating the initial model in two hours      28
Domain modeling, definition of      7
Domain modeling, distinguishing domain models from data models      7
Domain modeling, exercises and solutions for spotting modeling errors      39—42 44—45
Domain modeling, focusing on real-world objects within the problem domain      26
Domain modeling, guidelines      7 26
Domain modeling, identifying and eliminating duplicate terms      32
Domain modeling, practice questions in modeling      45—46
Domain modeling, static and dynamic parts of      25
DomainObject interface      315
doSubmitAction()      283 290
dot notation      423
Drawing a robustness diagram      3 11
Driving test cases from the analysis model      20
DUnit      339
Dynamic workflows      2
Dysfunctional requirements, definition of      375
Edit Customer Review use case      324
1 2 3 4 5
blank
Реклама
blank
blank
HR
@Mail.ru
       © Электронная библиотека попечительского совета мехмата МГУ, 2004-2024
Электронная библиотека мехмата МГУ | Valid HTML 4.01! | Valid CSS! О проекте