Object-Oriented Modeling and Design with UML
F**Z
Good for today's standards
UML is still a pretty new notation language which is developing as we speak. An experienced programmer may run into some small ambiguities, where there is no concrete way to do something.There are various names and notations for several things in UML. The capitalizations/small case for state diagrams may not always match up with other books, and some things can be drawn in more than one way. For instance, a pentagon to describe the entire diagram may exist or not be used at all in some cases.The discrepencies not only show the language's slow progression because of many differing opinions of language developers, but it is also a good indication of how difficult it may be to notice and understand how functions and drawings are to be interpretted between books and software usage. What's also interesting is that Rumbaugh has written various UML books, so he is aware of many of these differences. The question is whether authors as a team could only agree on a certain way to write the book, or if Rumbaugh was more in a hurry with the others to just get books done and printed to make money. If Rumbaugh comes out with a book on his own, it may be worth considering strongly! The same could probably be true for Blaha.Like many UML books probably, the book doesn't help you become aware of something like if an interface cannot be pointing to another interface. That is a more simpler example, but there are much more complex case whereas if you do not have a good grip on computer languages, it probably won't make much sense. Even though I cannot expect a book to cover most of these type of things, I think a book can attempt to cover some of these things so that a beginner could learn more easily. Part of the problem is because the language is still developing, and people just want to get books printed. If you know your UML well, here's your chance!You can still pass a course not knowing any of the idiosyncracies, but at a graduate level, it will not be a fulfilling way to learn.The way the book goes over the content it does cover, it does it very well. There are some things missing such as differing ways to show the same things, or it does not elaborate on topics enough that one would probably need to know for a graduate level course.
A**N
Four Stars
Had some good stuff, but didn't help me as much as I'd hoped with my problems at work.
Z**Y
Avoid this book at all costs
I had to use this book for school. I bought the E-book but can only use it on the Kindle for PC. The manufacture limits how this book can be read and this is a PAIN. The content is not overly helpful either and most of the content can be found on via google much faster and with better explanation.
G**9
Three Stars
A tough read but then again computer science is always a tough read.
J**N
Three Stars
buy for class
C**M
Five Stars
Good book
A**M
Good Product. Received in a timely manner
Good Product. Received in a timely manner.
W**E
lots of challenging exercises
One striking feature about this book is the sheer mass of exercises given for each chapter. OO modelling and designing using UML can be treated as a very high level process. Indeed it is certainly possible to do this, after reading the book. But the authors have striven to make as concrete as possible to anyone new to UML.Just as one example, consider Chapter 3, on class modelling. It has some of the ambiance of the designing of relational tables, if perhaps you are more familiar with the latter. Books on relational design often have many examples and problems, to drive home the concepts to students. Likewise here. Granted, if you do hail from a relational background, the style of object oriented modelling, and the usage of UML with which to express this, will be different from what you are used to.Later in the book, another useful feature is how you are challenged to convert pseudocode UML examples into actual code, C++ or Java. A vital skill. Since often a top down approach with UML is where UML encodes a large picture. But you then have to manually instantiate this as code. So the book gives you lots of practice.By the way - the book also has useful tips on good object oriented practices for both C++ and Java. These arose out of the discussion about UML. But you should consider adopting these practices irrespective of whether you use UML or not.
H**O
read
pros:A nice reference..cons:You can't use this as text book if you plan to learn the uml concepts...I recommend going with headFirst OOAD and then you buy this book.....conclusion:If you already know uml concepts and want to learn some new tricks , go with this book....If you are totally new to uml , OOAD, I recommend you should use HeadFirst OOAD book
P**R
Best for oops basic and advance
Good book for oops conceptNice chaptersThanks for best value Amazon
J**S
Good
Nice
D**B
Great OOML Text book, would be great if it had a Sol' manual though
Solid book, ended up using it very often. No Sol' manual though, which made checking answers a little bit difficult, especially if your professor is tight around the edges.All together, great book, learned quite a lot about program design
K**E
Page quality is amazing and got it in just 167 that's amazing
The media could not be loaded. Good conditionGood page qualityAwesome priceGood content
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