Skip to main content Site map

Lean Architecture (PDF eBook)


Lean Architecture (PDF eBook)

eBook by Bjørnvig, Gertrud/Coplien, James O.;

Lean Architecture (PDF eBook)

£29.99

ISBN:
9780470665039
Publication Date:
11 Nov 2010
Publisher:
Wiley
Pages:
376 pages
Format:
eBook
For delivery:
Download available
Lean Architecture (PDF eBook)

Description

More and more Agile projects are seeking architectural roots as they struggle with complexity and scale - and they're seeking lightweight ways to do it • Still seeking? In this book the authors help you to find your own path • Taking cues from Lean development, they can help steer your project toward practices with longstanding track records • Up-front architecture? Sure. You can deliver an architecture as code that compiles and that concretely guides development without bogging it down in a mass of documents and guesses about the implementation • Documentation? Even a whiteboard diagram, or a CRC card, is documentation: the goal isn't to avoid documentation, but to document just the right things in just the right amount • Process? This all works within the frameworks of Scrum, XP, and other Agile approaches

Contents

About the Authors. Preface. 1 Introduction. 1.1 The Touchstones: Lean and Agile. 1.2 Lean Architecture and Agile Feature Development. 1.3 Agile Production. 1.4 The Book in a Very Small Nutshell. 1.5 Lean and Agile: Contrasting and Complementary. 1.6 Lost Practices. 1.7 What this Book is Not About. 1.8 Agile, Lean ? Oh, Yeah, and Scrum and Methodologies and Such. 1.9 History and Such. 2 Agile Production in a Nutshell. 2.1 Engage the Stakeholders. 2.2 Define the Problem. 2.3 Focusing on What the System Is: The Foundations of Form. 2.4 Focusing on What the System Does: The System Lifeblood. 2.5 Design and Code. 2.6 Countdown: 3, 2, 1... 3 Stakeholder Engagement. 3.1 The Value Stream. 3.2 The Key Stakeholders. 3.3 Process Elements of Stakeholder Engagement. 3.4 The Network of Stakeholders: Trimming Wasted Time. 3.5 No Quick Fixes, but Some Hope. 4 Problem Definition. 4.1 What's Agile about Problem Definitions? 4.2 What's Lean about Problem Definitions? 4.3 Good and Bad Problem Definitions. 4.4 Problems and Solutions. 4.5 The Process Around Problem Definitions. 4.6 Problem Definitions, Goals, Charters, Visions, and Objectives. 4.7 Documentation? 5 What the System Is, Part 1: Lean Architecture. 5.1 Some Surprises about Architecture. 5.2 The First Design Step: Partitioning. 5.3 The Second Design Step: Selecting a Design Style. 5.4 Documentation? 5.5 History and Such. 6 What the System Is, Part 2: Coding It Up. 6.1 The Third Step: The Rough Framing of the Code. 6.2 Relationships in Architecture. 6.3 Not Your Old Professor's OO. 6.4 How much Architecture? 6.5 Documentation? 6.6 History and Such. 7 What the System Does: System Functionality. 7.1 What the System Does. 7.2 Who is Going to Use Our Software? 7.3 What do the Users Want to Use Our Software for? 7.4 Why Does the User Want to Use Our Software? 7.5 Consolidation of What the System Does. 7.6 Recap. 7.7 It Depends : When Use Cases are a Bad Fit. 7.8 Usability Testing. 7.9 Documentation? 7.10 History and Such. 8 Coding It Up: Basic Assembly. 8.1 The Big Picture: Model-View-Controller-User. 8.2 The Form and Architecture of Atomic Event Systems. 8.3 Updating the Domain Logic: Method Elaboration, Factoring, and Re-factoring. 8.4 Documentation? 8.5 Why All These Artifacts? 8.6 History and Such. 9 Coding it Up: The DCI Architecture. 9.1 Sometimes, Smart Objects Just Aren?t Enough. 9.2 DCI in a Nutshell. 9.3 Overview of DCI. 9.4 DCI by Example. 9.5 Updating the Domain Logic. 9.6 Context Objects in the User Mental Model: Solution to an Age-Old Problem. 9.7 Why All These Artifacts? 9.8 Beyond C++: DCI in Other Languages. 9.9 Documentation? 9.10 History and Such. 10 Epilog. Appendix A Scala Implementation of the DCI Account Example. Appendix B Account Example in Python. Appendix C Account Example in C#. Appendix D Account Example in Ruby. Appendix E Qi4j. Appendix F Account Example in Squeak. F.1 Testing Perspective. F.2 Data Perspective. F.3 Context Perspective. F.4 Interaction (RoleTrait) Perspective. F.5 Support Perspective (Infrastructure Classes). Bibliography. Index.

Accessing your eBook through Kortext

Once purchased, you can view your eBook through the Kortext app, available to download for Windows, Android and iOS devices. Once you have downloaded the app, your eBook will be available on your Kortext digital bookshelf and can even be downloaded to view offline anytime, anywhere, helping you learn without limits.

In addition, you'll have access to Kortext's smart study tools including highlighting, notetaking, copy and paste, and easy reference export.

To download the Kortext app, head to your device's app store or visit https://app.kortext.com to sign up and read through your browser.

This is a Kortext title - click here to find out more This is a Kortext title - click here to find out more

NB: eBook is only available for a single-user licence (i.e. not for multiple / networked users).

Back

Teesside University logo