Object-Oriented Application Development Using the Caché Postrelational Database
[Book]
by Wolfgang Kirsten, Michael Ihringer, Mathias Kühn, Bernhard Röhrig.
Second edition
Berlin, Heidelberg
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
2003
(XIV, 390 pages)
First Steps --; to Object Technology --; The Caché Object Model --; Defining Classes --; Fundamentals of Caché ObjectScript --; Object Access and Persistence --; Multidimensional Access and Globals --; Sql Access and Tables --; Programming with ActiveX --; Object Interaction with Java --; Web Programming with Caché Server Pages --; XML and Web Services --; Device Management.
Nowadays, newly developed software packages are often already obsolete by the time of their introduction. Object-oriented software development is a possibleif not the onlysolution to this dilemma: applications are modeled as software objects that describe the properties and the behavior of real-world entities. Such objects are encapsulated, in that they hidebehind a publicly known interfacethe complexity of their internal data structures and behaviors. This enables objects to be used in a wide range of program packages without the need to know the details of their internal implementation. Linking object-oriented modeled applications with a database places special demands on the database management system and the development environment if the usual performance and semantics losses are to be avoided. This book provides a detailed description of the object model of the Cach postrelational database. This second, revised and expanded edition includes the many new features of Cach 5. There is a comprehensive description of the new Cach Studio with its improvements for developing and debugging applications as well as a whole new chapter about XML- and SOAP-based Web services. The chapters about Java, ActiveX and the SQL Manager have undergone a complete revision.
Computer science.
Database management.
Software engineering.
QA76
.
64
B996
2003
by Wolfgang Kirsten, Michael Ihringer, Mathias Kühn, Bernhard Röhrig.