Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > The impact of distribution on support for objec...
View graph of relations

The impact of distribution on support for object-oriented software development

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

The impact of distribution on support for object-oriented software development. / Blair, Gordon S.; Lea, Rodger.
In: Software Engineering Journal, Vol. 7, No. 2, 1992, p. 130-138.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Author

Blair, Gordon S. ; Lea, Rodger. / The impact of distribution on support for object-oriented software development. In: Software Engineering Journal. 1992 ; Vol. 7, No. 2. pp. 130-138.

Bibtex

@article{5eef57be3ea04aab9507a957ba7fe9ef,
title = "The impact of distribution on support for object-oriented software development",
abstract = "Object-oriented computing is now an established technology for software development. However, a number of challenges must be met before the topic can claim to be fully mature. One of the most demanding challenges is posed by the move from single workstation environments to the more general case of a distributed system. The paper considers the impact of distribution on object-oriented computing. A number of important issues are raised, such as the need for a broader view of object-oriented computing and the requirement for flexible approaches to invocation. Problems relating to persistence and distribution transparency are also discussed. The importance of underlying system support for distributed object-oriented computing is stressed, and a case study of the Chorus/COOL environment is presented.",
author = "Blair, {Gordon S.} and Rodger Lea",
year = "1992",
language = "English",
volume = "7",
pages = "130--138",
journal = "Software Engineering Journal",
publisher = "Institute of Electrical Engineers",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The impact of distribution on support for object-oriented software development

AU - Blair, Gordon S.

AU - Lea, Rodger

PY - 1992

Y1 - 1992

N2 - Object-oriented computing is now an established technology for software development. However, a number of challenges must be met before the topic can claim to be fully mature. One of the most demanding challenges is posed by the move from single workstation environments to the more general case of a distributed system. The paper considers the impact of distribution on object-oriented computing. A number of important issues are raised, such as the need for a broader view of object-oriented computing and the requirement for flexible approaches to invocation. Problems relating to persistence and distribution transparency are also discussed. The importance of underlying system support for distributed object-oriented computing is stressed, and a case study of the Chorus/COOL environment is presented.

AB - Object-oriented computing is now an established technology for software development. However, a number of challenges must be met before the topic can claim to be fully mature. One of the most demanding challenges is posed by the move from single workstation environments to the more general case of a distributed system. The paper considers the impact of distribution on object-oriented computing. A number of important issues are raised, such as the need for a broader view of object-oriented computing and the requirement for flexible approaches to invocation. Problems relating to persistence and distribution transparency are also discussed. The importance of underlying system support for distributed object-oriented computing is stressed, and a case study of the Chorus/COOL environment is presented.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 7

SP - 130

EP - 138

JO - Software Engineering Journal

JF - Software Engineering Journal

IS - 2

ER -