Architecture Books
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Building Massively Scalable Components with C#: Problem Design Solution
Published 11 years ago
by Ryan Rogers, Wrox
Building high performance distributed systems that scale massively and remain reliable and secure is an extremely difficult task. This book is the first of its kind as it approaches engineering the middleware needed to build such complex systems as an application-whole. The design decisions and the trade-offs made are analyzed and discussed in great depth so the reader can truly understand the advantages and disadvantages of the specified approach.
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A Programmer's Introduction to Windows DNA
Published 20 years ago includes sample chapter
by Christian Gross, Apress
Windows DNA (Distributed Internet Architecture) forms the cornerstone for building scalable, robust web applications using Microsoft technologies. Windows DNA technologies include both client and server sides. Thus, Microsoft's "client-server architecture" addresses the full spectrum of enterprise application development, for the Internet era. You will learn to combine a wide variety of Windows DNA technologies, to crank out effective solutions for your own enterprise application requirements.
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Software Development on a Leash
Published 18 years ago includes sample chapter
by David Birmingham, Valerie Haynes Perry, Apress
Suitable for any project manager or VB software professional willing to think outside the proverbial box, Software Development on a Leash presents some innovative ideas for building more flexible software based on patterns, and "best practices" for reusable component design illustrated in Visual Basic.This book's most salient feature is the authors' no-holds-barred attack on "traditional" ways of designing software.
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Enterprise JavaBeans 2.1
Published 17 years ago includes sample chapter
by Stefan Denninger, Ingo Peters, Rob Castenada, Apress
Enterprise JavaBeans (EJB) is a server-side component model for transaction-aware distributed enterprise applications, written in the Java programming language. Enterprise JavaBeans 2.1 details the architecture of the Enterprise JavaBeans component model. After the authors introduce the component paradigm, they move on to cover EJB architecture basics.
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The Definitive Guide to Lift: Scala-based Web Framework
Published 11 years ago
by Derek ChenBecker, Tyler Weir, Marius Danciu, Apress
Learn all about Lift, an exciting new framework that leverages the Scala programming language to offer an innovative approach to creating web applications. Lift provides enormous flexibility and functionality while keeping your code simple. The Definitive Guide to Lift is brought to you by Derek Chen-Becker, Marius Danciu, and Tyler Weir, three committers on the Lift project.
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Java Persistence for Relational Databases
Published 17 years ago includes sample chapter
by Richard Sperko, Apress
Java Persistence for Relational Databases is chock full of best practices and patterns, for those of you who want to connect to databases using Java! Coverage includes various database-related APIs for Java, like JDO, JDBC (including the newest 3.0 APIs), and CMP ("Container Managed Persistence" with EJB). All those things you developers have wanted to know&emdash;but were afraid to ask&emdash;are featured inside this book.
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Professional Windows DNA: Building Distributed Web Applications with VB, COM+, MSMQ, SOAP, and ASP
Published 20 years ago
by Matthew Bortniker, Jonathan Crossland, Dino Esposito, Jason Hales, Whitney Hankison, Vishwanath Honnaya, Tim Huckaby, Slava Kristich, Edward Lee, Rockford Lhotka, Brian Loesgen, Stephen Mohr, Simon Robinson, Ash Rofail, Brad Sherrell, Scott Short, Dan Wahlin, Wrox
This book provides a practical and detailed roadmap of Windows DNA. Anchor book to the entire Wrox DNA series, it is divided into 6 sections: Introduction, Business Layer, Data Layer, Prese.
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Pro Scalable .NET 2.0 Application Designs
Published 15 years ago includes sample chapter
by Joachim Rossberg, Rickard Redler, Apress
Pro Scalable .NET 2.0 Application Design explains how to plan and implement .NET 2.0 applications. It addresses platform, hosting, and database requirements, as well as architectural design techniques that can be used to create the application itself. For example, the book illustrates a comparison between two models, the "traditional" and the "new" SOA, to weigh the advantages and disadvantages of each. This book also makes use of the newest version of Web Services Enhancements (WSE 3.
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Pro .NET 2.0 Code and Design Standards in C#
Published 15 years ago includes sample chapter
by Mark Horner, Apress
This book is special, because for the first time you get an easy-to-follow set of code and design standards that addresses the basic needs of .NET developers and application architects. The material is presented in a "what, why, where, and how" format, so it's easy to understand a given topic and apply the solution. The format facilitates fast understanding and quick reference&emdash;just what you need when you're under pressure.
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Foundations of AOP for J2EE Development
Published 15 years ago includes sample chapter
by Lionel Seinturier, Renaud Pawlak, Apress
Foundations of AOP for J2EE Development covers a relatively new programming paradigm: aspect-oriented programming, or AOP. Presented are the core concepts of AOP: AspectJ 5, JBoss AOP, Spring AOP, and JAC. Specific features of these tools are compared. The book also explores the potential uses of AOP in everyday programming life, such as design patterns implementation, program testing, and application management.