Object Orientation: Design Techniques - Object Orientation and General technical topics module Q907
This is the third and final module that introduces object orientation, and is applicable to any language with OO support. It is vital that applications are correctly designed from the beginning. Starting from first principles, we take students through the steps of modelling a system using informal methods, and we also introduce more formal methods such as UML.
This topic is presented on public courses
C++ for C Programmers,
C and C++ Programming,
Object Oriented Programming in PHP,
Python Programming,
Ruby Programming,
Perl for Larger Projects,
Java Programming for the Web,
Learning to Program in Java,
Deploying Java Applications on Linux / Unix,
Java Bootcamp
Background information
This module is available under an
Open Training Notes License for free download from
http://www.training-notes.co.uk.
Topics covered in this module
OO Design - some basics.
Start with a good understanding of OO.
And also a good understanding of the buzz words and design cycle..
Informal Techniques.
Micro or Macro?.
Specifying classes and methods.
Specifying extended classes.
Clusters of classes.
Generalise it out.
Programming and method standards.
Formal Methods.
Unified Modelling Language (UML).
Views.
Diagrams.
Model Elements.
UML Summary.
Tools.
Project management and design issues.
Extreme programming.
Planning.
Design.
Coding.
Testing.
Complete learning
If you are looking for a complete course and not just a information on a single subject, visit our
Listing and schedule page.
Well House Consultants specialise in training courses in
Python,
Perl,
PHP, and
MySQL. We run
Private Courses throughout the UK (and beyond for longer courses), and
Public Courses at our training centre in Melksham, Wiltshire, England.
It's surprisingly cost effective to come on our public courses -
even if
you live in a different
country or continent to us.
We have a technical library of over 600 books on the subjects on which we teach.
These books are available for reference at our training centre. Also
available is the Opentalk
Forum for discussion of technical questions.