Showing posts with label Software Architectures. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Software Architectures. Show all posts

Wednesday, 8 January 2014

Objects Vs Components


  • An object is an real programmatic entity i.e. an instance of class.
  • However, a component can consist of more than one object.
  • Component is a more abstract term. e.g. webserver is a component of an enterprise architecture or button is a component.
  • Usually components encapsulate some reusable functionality, are autonomous but can be connected to other components. Objects can as well do this but
  • Objects are, next to primitive types but components are usually bigger and have more common functions.
Quoting from wikipedia:



A software component is a system element offering a predefined service and able to communicate with other components. Clemens Szyperski and David Messerschmitt give the following five criteria for what a software component shall be to fulfill the definition:
  1. Multiple-use
  2. Non-context-specific
  3. Composable with other components
  4. Encapsulated i.e., non-investigable through its interfaces
  5. A unit of independent deployment and versioning.


Yet another definition is:
A component is an object written to a specification. It does not matter what the specification is: COM, Java Beans, etc., as long as the object adheres to the specification. It is only by adhering to the specification that the object becomes a component and gains features like reusability and so forth.
So, the difference between component & object is essentially a perspective difference.

More importantly, components do not support inheritance whereas objects do.

(Adapted from: 
http://forums.devx.com/showthread.php?s=2aa11bf305df7a0bc38815911cfb259b&t=25304
)

Seven Sins Of Software Project Management

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By David Churchville, ExtremePlanner Software Inc.

Sunday, 29 September 2013

Software Architectures

e-Notes Topic Subject Matter Experts
Introduction


Prof.H.S.Shashidhara, MSRIT, B'lore
Architectural Styles and Case Studies
Quality
Architectural Patterns -1


Prof.Chayapathy.V, RVCE, B'lore
Architectural Patterns -2
Architectural Patterns -3
Some Design Patterns

Prof.Sriram Govindarajan, PESIT, B'lore
Designing and Documenting Software Architecture