Wednesday 9 December 2015

ooad note1.0

Foundations of object model
The following events have contributed to the evolution of object-oriented concepts:

• Advances in computer architecture, including capability systems and hardware support for   operating systems concepts
• Advances in programming languages, as demonstrated in Simula, Smalltalk, CLU, and Ada
• Advances in programming methodology, including modularization and information hiding
• Advances in database models
• Research in artificial intelligence
• Advances in philosophy and cognitive science
Some Definitions
Object-oriented programming is a method of implementation in which programs are organized as cooperative collections of objects, each of which represents an instance of some class, and whose classes are all members of a hierarchy of classes united via inheritance relationships.

Object-oriented analysis is a method of analysis that examines requirements from the perspective of the classes and objects found in the vocabulary of the problem domain.

Object-oriented design is a method of design encompassing the process of object-oriented
Decomposition and a notation for depicting both logical and physical as well as static and dynamic models of the system under design.

Applylng the Object Model
Under thisà Benefits of the Object Model
The object model offers a number of significant benefits that other models simply do not provide.

First, the use of the object model helps us to exploit the expressive power of object-based and object-oriented programming languages.
Further larger improvements have been achieved by taking advantage of class hierarchies in the design process. This is often called object-oriented design and this is where the greatest benefits of using C++ have been found.

Next, the use of the object model encourages the reuse not only of software but of entire designs, leading to the creation of reusable application frame-works. We have found that object-oriented systems are often smaller than equivalent non-object-oriented implementations. Not only does this mean less code to write and maintain, but greater reuse of software also translates into cost and schedule benefits.

The use of the object model produces systems that are built upon stable intermediate forms, which are more resilient to change. This also means that such systems can be allowed to evolve over time, rather than be abandoned or  completely redesigned in response to the first major change in requirements.

The object model has proven applicable to a wide variety of problem domains.
Air traffic control
Animation 
Mathematical analysis
Banking and insurance software
Music composition
Business data processing
Office automation
Operating systems
Command and control systems
Computer aided design
Reusable software components
Computer aided education Robotics
Computer integrated manufacturing
Software development environments
Databases
User interface design
Image recognition
VLSI design

The use of object-oriented development may be ill-advised for some domains, not for any technical reasons, but for nontechnical ones, such as the absence of a suitably trained staff or a good development environment.

Monday 30 November 2015

CN-II blue print

JAIN UNIVERSITY - BCA - BLUE PRINT DETAILS
5BCA2 -COMPUTER NETWORK -II






Units
No.of  Teaching hours
Part A-Marks
Part B-Marks
Part C-Marks
Total Marks
1
5
2
5
5
12
2
10
6
5
10
21
3
15
6
10
15
31
4
10
6
5
10
21
5
10
4
5
10
19
6
10
6
10
0
16
Total
60 Hrs.
15 questions
8 questions
5 questions
120