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That is where a Change Management System comes handy, keeping track of a change request.
This is not to say you are totally wrong. Actually, you right when comes to some aspect of team communication, emails are important.
However, in a large-scale complex software project with many full-time developers, Test team, Product Manager, Requirement Engineer, Configuration Manager, Project Manager, in short a project that requires a full blown development team you have no choice, but to put implement a good methodology like Agile, among other things. Just emails tracking won't do it.
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konate wrote: However, in a large-scale complex software project with many full-time
developers, Test team, Product Manager, Requirement Engineer, Configuration
Manager, Project Manager, in short a project that requires a full blown
development team you have no choice, but to put implement a good methodology
like Agile, among other things. Just emails tracking won't do it.
Amen!
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I was looking for tools to generate" *.hbm.xml" files from database or from domain classes, after some googling I found this great tool "NHibernate Mapping Generator" :
http://nmg.codeplex.com/[^]
Hope this help you in your project so you can quickly end the NHibernate mapping operation!
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psst wrong forum - this one[^] is going to appreciate the info even more!
Never underestimate the power of human stupidity
RAH
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ok,
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Great tools. However, with hibernate annotations *.hbm.xml" files aren't need anymore. Check it out.
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thnks, can u give me the link to check it?
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Hi
I would like to thank you all for the contributions that you have provided my answer. I would like to know what sort of architecture can i use for delivering a business system to different clients. For example I might have, say a accounting system that i would like provide to different clients, which employees cloud computing concepts. I would really like to know what is the best architecture i can use for multi-company architecture systems using C# on the .NET platform.
Thanks in advance
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sijimann wrote: I would really like to know what is the best architecture ...
One that fits the business needs of the targeted customer base.
Naturally one must first determine what the targeted customers are. Then one must figure out what the requirements are for the product(s).
None of that has anything to do with architecture.
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Hi
I would like to thank you all for the contributions that you have provided my answer. I would like to know what sort of architecture can i use for delivering a business system to different clients. For example I might have, say a accounting system that i would like provide to different clients, which employees cloud computing concepts. I would really like to know what is the best architecture i can use for multi-company architecture systems.
Thanks in advance
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sijimann wrote: I would like to thank you all for the contributions that you have provided my answer. I would like to know what sort of architecture can i use for delivering a business system to different clients.
"Loosly coupled, modular, distributed architecture."
sijimann wrote: For example I might have, say a accounting system that i would like provide to different clients, which employees cloud computing concepts. I would really like to know what is the best architecture i can use for multi-company architecture systems.
Not an architecture, but a design-pattern. It's called a strategy-pattern. You'd create an abstract base class, define abstract methods for insert, update, open and close-statements. Then you'd encapsulate the first strategy into a class called "LocalMysl" and another for "Azure", and derive both from your base-class. Use a factory-pattern to instantiate the correct strategy on your behalf, similar to below
MyBaseClass data = MyDataStrategy.Create("Azure");
data.Select();
Bastard Programmer from Hell
If you can't read my code, try converting it here[^]
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Dear All,
i want to develop a new asp.net web project,how can i proceed,can u tell me an example
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Go to www.asp.net/[^] where you will find lots of samples.
Use the best guess
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bnraj1528 wrote: how can i proceed
Collect requirements.
Create an architecture.
THEN decide on technologies.
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1. Install on your deployment machine
-Microsoft web server IIS to store your ASP pages and other application files
-Microsoft SQLServer as database server
2.Implement 3-tier Design pattern
3. Have Microsoft Visual Studio or Express Edition of C# or VB on your development machine.
4. Read about ASP.NET, C# or VB.NET, and ADO.NET
5. Ask questions!!!
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I am interested in knowing how you design your Domain Model and its persistance layer.
Particularly I design the Domain Model completely independent from any other logical application layer. As a matter of fact, it is oblivious of any other logical layer.
In that case I do create a service layer that acts as a proxy and sends domain model objects to the persistence layer.
I've seen Dependency Injection/IoC to perform the persistence, having the interface defined in the Domain Model, but I never really liked this approach, because it creates a small dependence of interface implementation by the persistence layer.
Do you have "Save" methods on your Domain Objects?
I'd appreciate if you shared your thoughts.
To alcohol! The cause of, and solution to, all of life's problems - Homer Simpson
----
Our heads are round so our thoughts can change direction - Francis Picabia
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Hi,
If you are using relational database system like MySQL, Oracle, consider using an Object-Relational Mapping framework(ORM) that implements Data Acess Layer(DAL) design pattern . TopLink, Hibernate, ADO.Net, Java JPA, just to name a few, are popular ORM Frameworks. These frameworks abstract DBMS access and handle all database CRUD for you, and do much more. For example using Java JPA, you would save a domain object as follow:
EntityManager em;
em.persist(BookDTO);// BookDTO is the object to be saved in you database. BookDTO must be annotated as an Entity( @Entity) as far as JPA is concern. You can apply Dependency Injection/IoC to inject the EntityManager in your component.
To use DAL patern organize your Domain Model into Business Object(BO) and Data Transfer Object(DTO), and utilize an ORM framework of your choice.
Bakary Konate
modified 4-May-13 16:06pm.
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Hi,
At work I have created a homebrew framework ColdBlood with various object oriented design features; one is persistency.
In the specification (interface) of each object type we differ between properties, references, child and children. We do this using different attributes (in C#). A property can have the optional flag Persistent enabled, which means this property is serializable.
All the specification attributes are compiled into some info classes for fast lookup e.g. by the serializer/deserializer.
This design means a complete separation of persistency specification and serializer/deserializer implementation.
Currently, we use a serializer/deserializer implementation with multiple ToBytes and FromBytes methods. The resulting byte data can be transfered to/from files or sockets.
Kind Regards,
Keld Ølykke
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Is this the forum for asking questions about USB ?
I'm implementing the USB stuff in firmware, and frequently the rules (particularly the protocol) don't make sense from the documents I'm reading.
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> "Is this the forum for asking questions about USB ?"
No. Try Hardware & Devices
"It's true that hard work never killed anyone. But I figure, why take the chance." - Ronald Reagan
That's what machines are for.
Got a problem?
Sleep on it.
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Thanks, headed over there now
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pls tell me some good book of arm cortex m3
also i want to work using embedded c so if someone can tell me some good book that will corelate the two
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