C# - Gang Of Four - Design Patterns, Elements Of Reusable Object Oriented Software book
Par roberts betty le vendredi, décembre 23 2016, 09:02 - Lien permanent
C# - Gang Of Four - Design Patterns, Elements Of Reusable Object Oriented Software. Erich Gamma, John M. Vlissides, Ralph Johnson, Richard Helm
C.Gang.Of.Four.Design.Patterns.Elements.Of.Reusable.Object.Oriented.Software.pdf
ISBN: 0201634988,9780201634983 | 551 pages | 14 Mb
C# - Gang Of Four - Design Patterns, Elements Of Reusable Object Oriented Software Erich Gamma, John M. Vlissides, Ralph Johnson, Richard Helm
Publisher: Addison-Wesley Professional
The authors of this book are Erich Gamma, Richard Helm, Ralph Johnson and John Vlissides. More recently, C# has popularized the delegate concept, contributing to the success of that language. World code, it is more difficult than expected. You who work on design pattern must familiar with Gang of Four (GoF). A book about technology - it's a book about data and design and patterns. Andre Mare, the author of Ralph Johnson, and John Vlissides. The authors of this book are often refers to as Gang of Four Implementation: Let's implement decorated design pattern by C#. This landmark In Part I: How to Use Design Patterns, Gamma describes gives his opinion on the appropriate ways to think about and use design patterns, and describes the difference between patterns libraries, such as GoF, and an Alexandrian pattern language. Either because you're new to them, or as a refresher, here is the start of a series on the "Gang of Four" design patterns. For many applications, delegates simplify the use of elegant design patterns (Observer, Strategy, State[GoF]) composed of very loosely coupled objects. Standard C++ does not have true object-oriented function pointers. It's the database developer's equivalent of the famous GoF (“Gang of Four”) design patterns book, Design Patterns: Elements of Reusable Object-Oriented Software. Design Patterns: Elements of Reusable Object-Oriented Software is a Software Engineering book. Delphi's implementation of interfaces lacks of either a garbage collector (as C# or Java do (ab)use), or at least a native weak reference support (as with Apple's ARC model). I began myself writing a series of Delphi examples aiming to explain the classic design patterns as defined in "Design Patterns (Elements of reusable Object-Oriented Software)" by the "Gang of Four" (GOF). Http://www.nileshgule.com/2012/08/builder-design-pattern.html. [GoF] "Design Patterns: Elements of Reusable Object-Oriented Software", E. I never finished the series for lack of time. Reference: Design Pattern - Builder Pattern Here is an example of Builder pattern in C# using Bill as an example. Design Patterns: Elements of Reusable Object-Oriented Software. The most talked about books were “Design Patterns: Elements of Reusable Object Oriented Software” by GOF, and “Head First Design Patterns”. Erich Gamma lept onto the software world stage in 1995 as co-author of the best-selling book Design Patterns: Elements of Reusable Object-Oriented Software (Addison-Wesley, 1995) [1].