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Handling Business Objects

Hasso Plattner
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Hasso Plattner: Hasso Plattner Institute

Chapter Chapter 34 in A Course in In-Memory Data Management, 2014, pp 235-238 from Springer

Abstract: Abstract The notion of objects as a means to structure code reaches back to the 1960s when Dahl and Nygaard invented Simula-67 [DN66]. Object-oriented programming as a new programming paradigm was introduced by Alan Kay with the Smalltalk programming language in the 1970s [Ing78]. Since then, object-orientation has evolved into the dominant programming paradigm for applications in various domains. Especially enterprise applications with their inherent aim to capture properties, behavior, and processes of real world companies benefit from object-oriented programming features. Concepts such as encapsulation, aggregation, and inheritance provide system architects with the means to design domain models, which reflect structures and relations of the real world. Based on such domain models, developers are able to communicate and discuss business logic with domain experts to verify conceptual and logical correctness of the system’s functionality.

Keywords: Domain Expert; Relational Algebra; Structure Code; Business Object; Delivery Term (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2014
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:spr:sprchp:978-3-642-55270-0_34

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DOI: 10.1007/978-3-642-55270-0_34

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