Tous nos rayons

Déjà client ? Identifiez-vous

Mot de passe oublié ?

Nouveau client ?

CRÉER VOTRE COMPTE
Object-Oriented Software Construction
Ajouter à une liste

Librairie Eyrolles - Paris 5e
Indisponible

Object-Oriented Software Construction

Object-Oriented Software Construction

Bertrand Meyer

1254 pages, parution le 10/04/1997 (2eme édition)

Résumé

Object-Oriented Software Construction, second edition is the comprehensive reference on all aspects of object technology, from design principles to O-O techniques, Design by Contract, O-O analysis, concurrency, persistence, abstract data types and many more. Written by a pioneer in the field, contains an in-depth analysis of both methodological and technical issues.

Two-color printing provides for clear figures and readable software extracts.

Comes with a CD-ROM containing: the complete hyperlinked text, for easy reference; software to read the text on major industry platforms; supplementary material (reusable components, mathematical complements); and a complete graphical O-O development environment supporting the concepts of the book.

About the accompanying CD-ROM

The CD-ROM that comes with this book contains the entire hyperlinked text in Adobe Acrobat format. It also includes Adobe's Acrobat Reader software, enabling you to read that format; the versions provided cover major industry platforms. If you do not already have Acrobat Reader on your computer, you can install it by following the instructions. The author and the publisher make no representations as to any property of Acrobat and associated tools; the Acrobat Reader is simply provided as a service to readers of this book, and any Acrobat questions should be directed to Adobe. You may also check with Adobe about any versions of the Reader that may have appeared after the book. To get started with the CD-ROM, open the Acrobat file README.pdf in the OOSC_2 directory, which will direct you to the table of contents and the index. You can only open that file under Acrobat Reader; if the Reader has not been installed on your computer, examine instead the plain-text version in the file readme.txt in the top-level directory. The instructions also appear at the end of this book.

The presence of an electronic version will be particularly useful to readers who want to take advantage of the thousands of cross-references present in this book (see "A Book- Wide Web", page viii). Although for a first sequential reading you will probably prefer to follow the paper version, having the electronic form available on a computer next to the book alllows you to follow a link once in a while without having to turn pages back and forth. The electronic form is particularly convenient for a later reading during which you may wish to explore links more systematically.

All links (cross-references) appear in blue in the Acrobat form, as illustrated twice above (but not visible in the printed version). To follow a link, just click on the blue part. If the reference is to another chapter, the chapter will appear in a new window. The Acrobat Reader command to come back to the previous position is normally Control- minus-sign (that is, type -- while holding down the CONTROL key). Consult the on-line Acrobat Reader documentation for other useful navigational commands.

Bibliographical references also appear as links, such as [Knuth 1968], in the Acrobat form, so that you can click on any of them to see the corresponding entry in the bibliography of appendix E.

The CD-ROM also contains:

  • Library components providing extensive material for Appendix A.
  • A chapter from the manual for a graphical application builder, providing mathematical complements to the material of chapter 32.

In addition, the CD-ROM includes a time-limited version of an advanced object-oriented development environment for Windows 95 or Windows NT, as described in chapter 36, providing an excellent hands-on opportunity to try out the ideas developed throughout the book. The "Readme" file directs you to the installation instructions and system requirements.

L'auteur - Bertrand Meyer

Français installé longtemps aux États-Unis, Bertrand Meyer est un des pionniers de l'approche objet et des techniques de génie logiciel associées. Créateur du langage Eiffel, il a fondé en 1985 en Californie la société Eiffel Software, éditeur d'outils de développement orientés objet et de bibliothèques de composants. Consultant et conférencier renommé, il est auteur de nombreux ouvrages parus en anglais sur la théorie des langages, le génie logiciel, les technologies objet et le langage Eiffel. Depuis 2001 il occupe, tout en restant associé à Eiffel Software, la chaire de Génie logiciel à l'École Polytechnique Fédérale de Zurich [ETH), où il a succédé à Niklaus Wirth, le créateur du langage Pascal. Membre de l'Académie des technologies et docteur honoris causa de l'université de Saint-Pétersbourg, Bertrand Meyer a reçu plusieurs prix pour son oeuvre scientifique, en particulier le Jolt Award pour le présent ouvrage, le premier prix Dahl-Nygaard de technologie objet et le Software System Award de l'ACM en 2007.

Caractéristiques techniques

  PAPIER
Éditeur(s) Prentice Hall
Auteur(s) Bertrand Meyer
Parution 10/04/1997
Édition  2eme édition
Nb. de pages 1254
Intérieur 2 couleurs
EAN13 9780136291558
ISBN13 978-0-13-629155-8

Avantages Eyrolles.com

Livraison à partir de 0,01 en France métropolitaine
Paiement en ligne SÉCURISÉ
Livraison dans le monde
Retour sous 15 jours
+ d'un million et demi de livres disponibles
satisfait ou remboursé
Satisfait ou remboursé
Paiement sécurisé
modes de paiement
Paiement à l'expédition
partout dans le monde
Livraison partout dans le monde
Service clients sav@commande.eyrolles.com
librairie française
Librairie française depuis 1925
Recevez nos newsletters
Vous serez régulièrement informé(e) de toutes nos actualités.
Inscription