Object-Oriented Software Construction (original) (raw)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Book by Bertrand Meyer
Object-Oriented Software Construction
Author | Bertrand Meyer |
Subject | software object-oriented programming |
Publisher | Prentice Hall |
Publication date | 1988, 1997 |
Pages | 1254 + xxviii |
ISBN | 978-0136291558 (1997 ed.) |
OCLC | 36187052 |
Dewey Decimal | 005.1/17 21 |
LC Class | QA76.64 .M493 1997 |
Object-Oriented Software Construction, also called OOSC, is a book by Bertrand Meyer, widely considered a foundational text of object-oriented programming.[_citation needed_] The first edition was published in 1988; the second edition, extensively revised and expanded (more than 1300 pages), in 1997. Many translations are available including Dutch (first edition only), French (1+2), German (1), Italian (1), Japanese (1+2), Persian (1), Polish (2), Romanian (1), Russian (2), Serbian (2), and Spanish (2).[1] The book has been cited thousands of times. As of 15 December 2011[update], The Association for Computing Machinery's (ACM) Guide to Computing Literature counts 2,233 citations,[2] for the second edition alone in computer science journals and technical books; Google Scholar lists 7,305 citations. As of September 2006[update], the book is number 35 in the list of all-time most cited works (books, articles, etc.) in computer science literature, with 1,260 citations.[3]The book won a Jolt award in 1994.[4] The second edition is available online free.[5]
Unless otherwise indicated, descriptions below apply to the second edition.
The book presents object technology as an answer to major issues of software engineering, with a special emphasis on addressing the software quality factors of correctness, robustness, extendibility and reusability. It starts with an examination of the issues of software quality, then introduces abstract data types as the theoretical basis for object technology and proceeds with the main object-oriented techniques: classes, objects, genericity, inheritance, Design by Contract, concurrency, and persistence. It includes extensive discussions of methodological issues.
Preface etc.Part A: The issues 1 Software quality 2 Criteria of object orientation Part B: The road to object orientation 3 Modularity 4 Approaches to reusability 5 Towards object technology 6 Abstract data types Part C: Object-oriented techniques 7 The static structure: classes 8 The run-time structure: objects 9 Memory management 10 Genericity 11 Design by Contract: building reliable software 12 When the contract is broken: exception handling 13 Supporting mechanisms 14 Introduction to inheritance 15 Multiple inheritance 16 Inheritance techniques 17 Typing 18 Global objects and constants | Part D: Object-oriented methodology: applying the method well 19 On methodology 20 Design pattern: multi-panel interactive systems 21 Inheritance case study: “undo” in an interactive system 22 How to find the classes 23 Principles of class design 24 Using inheritance well 25 Useful techniques 26 A sense of style 27 Object-oriented analysis 28 The software construction process 29 Teaching the method Part E: Advanced topics 30 Concurrency, distribution, client-server and the Internet 31 Object persistence and databases 32 Some O-O techniques for graphical interactive applications | Part F: Applying the method in various languages and environments 33 O-O programming and Ada 34 Emulating object technology in non-O-O environments 35 Simula to Java and beyond: major O-O languages and environments Part G: Doing it right 36 An object-oriented environment Epilogue, In Full Frankness Exposing the Language Part H: Appendices A Extracts from the Base library B Genericity versus inheritance C Principles, rules, precepts and definitions D A glossary of object technology E Bibliography Index |
---|
The first edition of the book used the programming language Eiffel for the examples and served as a justification of the language design choices for Eiffel. The second edition also uses Eiffel as its notation, but in an effort to separate the notation from the concepts it does not name the language until the Epilogue, on page 1162, where Eiffel appears as the last word. A few months after publication of the second edition, a reader posted on Usenet[_citation needed_] his discovery that the book's 36 chapters alternatively start with the letters E, I, F, F, E, L, a pattern being repeated 6 times. Also, in the Appendix, titled "Epilogue, In Full Frankness Exposing the Language" (in first initials), the first letters of each paragraph spell the same pattern.
- ^ Web search, August 2006
- ^ "Object-oriented software construction (2nd ed.)". Association for Computing Machinery (ACM). 2024.
- ^ Citeseer, September 2006
- ^ "Previous Winners: Books". Dr. Dobb's Journal (DDJ). 2001. Archived from the original on 2009-05-25.
- ^ Meyer, Bertrand (1997). Object-Oriented Software Construction (2nd ed.). Prentice-Hall. ISBN 978-0136291558.
Meyer, Bertrand (1988). Object-Oriented Software Construction. Prentice Hall. ISBN 978-0-13-629049-0.
Meyer, Bertrand (1997). Object-Oriented Software Construction, second edition. Prentice Hall. ISBN 978-0-13-629155-8.
Official website, Bertrand Meyer (author), free online 2nd edition 1997 isbn 978-0136291558