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Pattern Languages of Program Design 5
 
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Pattern Languages of Program Design 5 [Paperback]

Dragos Manolescu (Author), Markus Voelter (Author), James Noble (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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Book Description

May 1, 2006

Design patterns have moved into the mainstream of professional software development as a highly effective means of improving the quality of software engineering, system design, and development, as well as the communication among the people building them. Patterns capture many of the best practices of software design, making them available to all software engineers.

The fifth volume in a series of books documenting patterns for professional software developers, Pattern Languages of Program Design 5 covers current software development best practices distilled by the patterns community. The material presented in the nineteen chapters of this book distills first-rate patterns, which were workshopped at recent PLoP conferences and rigorously reviewed and enhanced by leading experts in attendance. Representing the best of the conferences, these patterns provide effective, tested, and versatile software design solutions for solving real-world problems in a variety of domains.

Pattern Languages of Program Design 5 covers a wide range of topics, particularly the areas of object-oriented systems, programming techniques, temporal patterns, security, domain-oriented patterns, human-computer interaction, software management, and software patterns.

Among them, you will find patterns addressing:

  • Object-oriented systems
  • Middleware
  • Concurrency and resource management problems
  • Distributed systems
  • Mobile telephony
  • Web-based applications
  • Extensibility and reuse
  • Meta-patterns

As patterns continue to capture insight from many areas of practical software development, more and more developers are discovering that using patterns improves communication and helps them build better software.




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Editorial Reviews

From the Back Cover

Design patterns have moved into the mainstream of professional software development as a highly effective means of improving the quality of software engineering, system design, and development, as well as the communication among the people building them. Patterns capture many of the best practices of software design, making them available to all software engineers.

The fifth volume in a series of books documenting patterns for professional software developers, Pattern Languages of Program Design 5 covers current software development best practices distilled by the patterns community. The material presented in the nineteen chapters of this book distills first-rate patterns, which were workshopped at recent PLoP conferences and rigorously reviewed and enhanced by leading experts in attendance. Representing the best of the conferences, these patterns provide effective, tested, and versatile software design solutions for solving real-world problems in a variety of domains.

Pattern Languages of Program Design 5 covers a wide range of topics, particularly the areas of object-oriented systems, programming techniques, temporal patterns, security, domain-oriented patterns, human-computer interaction, software management, and software patterns.

Among them, you will find patterns addressing:

  • Object-oriented systems
  • Middleware
  • Concurrency and resource management problems
  • Distributed systems
  • Mobile telephony
  • Web-based applications
  • Extensibility and reuse
  • Meta-patterns

As patterns continue to capture insight from many areas of practical software development, more and more developers are discovering that using patterns improves communication and helps them build better software.



About the Author

Dragos Manolescu is a software architect with ThoughtWorks, Inc., where he works on architecture evaluation and enterprise integration projects. Involved with the patterns community since 1996, Dragos chaired the PLoP 1999 conference, contributed to Pattern Languages of Program Design 4 (Addison-Wesley, 2000), and coauthored Integration Patterns (Microsoft Press, 2004).

Markus Voelter is a consultant and coach for software technology and engineering. Markus focuses on software architecture, middleware, and model-driven software development. He is the author of several patterns, the coauthor of Server Component Patterns and Remoting Patterns (both Wiley Patterns Series), and a regular speaker at conferences worldwide.

James Noble is professor of computer science and software engineering at Victoria University in Wellington, New Zealand, where he researches object-oriented approaches to user and programmer interface design. He is the coauthor of Small Memory Software: Patterns for Systems with Limited Memory (Addison-Wesley, 2001).




Product Details

  • Paperback: 624 pages
  • Publisher: Addison-Wesley Professional (May 1, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0321321944
  • ISBN-13: 978-0321321947
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 7.4 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.9 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,308,343 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

Customer Reviews

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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars hodge podge of good patterns, May 9, 2006
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This review is from: Pattern Languages of Program Design 5 (Paperback)
"Pattern Languages of Program Design 5" is the latest in a series output by the PLoP (pattern languages of programming) conferences. A pattern language is a group of higher order design patterns that go together to form a vocabulary for a specific problem.

Each chapter stands on its own and is written by different people. This makes the format all over the place - each chapter is somewhat different. Some of the content is fairly specialized. There are chapters on real time systems, radio and pattern writing. While all of these are fascinating, they are unlikely to appeal to the same group of practicing developers.

At times, the book feels academic. It is probably supposed to as it is on introducing new patterns to the world. I felt there was a strong emphasis on contributing to PLoP and writing new patterns.

That said, each chapter was very good on its own. The authors were all interesting and explained the topic clearly. There were good examples and the quality was high.

I recommend this book if interested in PLoP or pattern writing in general. If you've read #4 in the series, you will definitely find this one enjoyable. If not, I would recommend starting with #1 in the series. There are some backward references to earlier books, so it would be easier to follow.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars progress in understanding patterns, May 29, 2006
This review is from: Pattern Languages of Program Design 5 (Paperback)
Software patterns have been a seminal idea whose merit is now considered axiomatic by most experienced programmers. The authors of this book have been part of the patterns community for several years. Yes, there certainly is such a thing as a patterns community, with regularly held conferences, designated PLoP, as in the book's title.

The book is essentially an update of what the authors consider to be new and useful patterns, since the previous book in this series. Which is actually a useful way to measure progress in this field. Akin perhaps to some science journals that describe better modelling or understanding of some natural phenomena. In the introduction, the authors remark that now there are several thousand published patterns! Isn't that amazing? A tribute to the power of the idea. But this proliferation also can lead to confusion. A metalanguage is needed to classify the patterns. And expert knowledge to discern which are or might be the most useful patterns. The remit of this book is to try to address the latter need. But it also provides several chapters on how to describe patterns in a consistent manner.

The patterns span quite diverse applications. Reflects the many uses of software. One chapter talks about MoRaR, which is for designing wireless software. There are issues here of a limited geographic reach of devices, and intermittent and low bandwidth linkages. Constraints that need to be addressed by some patterns.

Another chapter ventures into patterns for plug-ins. This perhaps reflects the popularity of Eclipse as a Java IDE. Or, more generally, of designing a software infrastructure flexible enough to accomodate many developers.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Are you serious about enterprise-grade object oriented problem solving or do you want to fool around?, August 16, 2006
By 
R. Adams (Washington, DC) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Pattern Languages of Program Design 5 (Paperback)
This book offers you, the software engineer, the opportunity to learn from the hard won experience of some very elite engineers. That experience has been documented, shepherded, peer-reviewed, further refined, edited, and refined again. I wish I could succinctly communicate my object-oriented designs as cogently and as comprehensively as shown here. I know engineers at MIT Lincoln laboratory that could benefit from this book.

This scholarly work of computer science advances the state of the art in object oriented design. You are looking at the best of the best of pattern languages (patterns that are made up of design patterns) over a period of about four to five years. It is unusual for a book to have a single idea or idiom, on which, you could base an entire software product. This book provides more than one or two such ideas. It provides fertile ground to create a range of products that provide an competitive advantage in the market place.

Most organizations have standardized on one to three languages that are acceptable for use building enterprise-grade applications. My particular favorite pattern language, the Dynamic Object Model, is worth the price of the book alone if you are a software engineer tasked with supporting an analyst or customer with very vague requirements using a relatively static language. Turn those vague needs into an incredibly flexible system to explore those requirements while keeping maintenance costs under control.

If you must use a relatively static language (Java, C++, C#) and need to get more dynamic (like inserting new types or fields into objects at runtime) the Dynamic Object Model pattern language is for you. Not all of us are allowed to benefit from features commonly found in higher-level languages like Python or Smalltalk. This pattern language helps us trade speed for design flexibility. Advice is also given on borrowing virtual machine technology to speed our flexible implementations.

The reference to a Master's thesis describing a system, based on the Dynamic Object Model, that provides an editor for relational databases is invaluable if you have a need for providing such a capability for a non-technical end user.

I was particularly pleased with the GRID pattern language and distributed workflow plattern language. The ideas (groupings of patterns) are plainly stated, obvious in their value, extraordinarily written, and demonstrated in as little code as possible (often less than 200 lines).

If you are focused on learning APIs and certifying for various technologies this book is NOT for you. There are enough projects that work very well in a particular vendor's paradigm (create form, publish, use; or three tier MVC-based architecture).

If your software development needs aren't completely met by a vendor's solution paradigm, or if you are focused on expanding your understanding of problem solving through object oriented design and implementation then you have already cheated yourself by not buying this book. Creating proof of concept prototypes based on the sample code and adapting the designs to your own domain will take YEARS off your learning curve.

Very few patterns books are this accessible. If you are serious about creating "outside the box" object oriented systems you should do yourself a favor and consider this book.
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