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Advanced Domain Modeling

Advanced Domain Modeling. Architecting for Agility with Color Models* David J. Anderson Program Manager, Microsoft dander@microsoft.com. *Based on the work of Peter Coad, Stephen R. Palmer and others. Objectives. Peter Coad and Patterns A brief history of how color modeling came about

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Advanced Domain Modeling

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  1. Advanced Domain Modeling Architecting for Agility with Color Models* David J. Anderson Program Manager, Microsoft dander@microsoft.com *Based on the work of Peter Coad, Stephen R. Palmer and others

  2. Objectives • Peter Coad and Patterns • A brief history of how color modeling came about • Archetypes and the Domain Neutral Components • Modeling for Agility • Loose coupling and Law of Demeter • Advances in Color Modeling since 1999 • The role of <<role>>s • Getting the blues • Whole-part relationships • Patterns of color communicate architecture smells • Enterprise components from color models

  3. History - 1992

  4. Catalog Description Role Transaction Thing History - 1995 Object Models: Strategies, Patterns & Applications, 1st ed., Coad, Mayfield & North, Yourdon Press, Prentice Hall, 1995

  5. <<Person/Place/Thing>> <<Catalog Description>> <<Role>> <<Moment-Interval>>* OrganizationUnit OrganizationUnitDescription Employee PeriodOfEmployment Name=KC Branch Description = Branch Office History – Spring 1997 • Moment or Interval – a generalization of the idea of a transaction e.g. • Warranty Period • Period of Employment • Loan Approval Request • Funds Disbursement [*still referred to as “Transaction” in], Object Models: Strategies, Patterns & Applications, 2nd ed., Coad, Mayfield & North, Yourdon Press, Prentice Hall, 1997

  6. History – September 1997 Color instantly communicates the pattern of class relationships to the viewer If the colors are not configured in the correct pattern then there are strong clues that the model could be improved!

  7. Dec 1998 – Archetypes Philip Bradley argues for Archetypes not stereotypes. “ a model from which all things of the same kind more or less follow” rather than “ a conventional, formulaic, over-simplified conception, opinion or image” And that, all business flows should or ought to be basically the same. “Data Model Patterns - Conventions of Thought”, David Hay, Dorset House, 1996 [The Universal Data Model] Phil Bradley was Development Manager Persistence Layer, PowerLender Project, United Overseas Bank, Singapore 1997 - 1999

  8. “Java Modeling in Color : Enterprise Components and Process”, Coad, Lefebvre and De Luca, PTR-PH 1999 History – January 1999

  9. Architecture Board

  10. Component Map

  11. Archived Iteration

  12. Definition of an Agile Model • Elegant • Enough to get the job done and no more • Extensible • Loosely coupled • Robust and resilient to change • Communicates clearly “ In anything at all, perfection is finally attained not when there is no longer anything to add, but when there is no longer anything to take away” Antoine de Saint Exupery

  13. Behavior of Colors totalValue() isComplete() isUrgent() assessPerformance() salesMadeInPeriod() averageSalesOverPeriod() assessAccuray() assessSpeed() isActive() isSuspended() _findByIdNumber() _findByName() isOfType() getValue() assessAcrossRoles() listRolesPlayedBy() totalUnitsAvailable() totalUnitsManufactured() assessRoleAllowed() • Instances of Archetypes share similar attributes • Instances of Archetypes share similar methods Courtesy Stephen R. Palmer

  14. Where do <<Role>>s come from? OK! Better!

  15. Naming Conventions for Roles • When no domain specific term for a <<role>> exists use the template • Person|Place|Thing In Moment-Interval • Or, GreenInPinke.g. • ItemInSale Note: the actual aggregating <<Moment-Interval>> is used for naming rather than the <<MI-Detail>>

  16. Roles and Inheritance Courtesy Stephen R. Palmer

  17. Inherit from a Role superclass Courtesy Stephen R. Palmer

  18. Manage roles with a description Courtesy Stephen R. Palmer

  19. Subsequent Roles Courtesy Stephen R. Palmer

  20. Moment-Intervals get the Blues • Missing from the original DNC in 1999 • Pink Classes can have Descriptions just like Greens

  21. Whole-Part Relationships

  22. Color Differences Can Be OK (A) This model has a whole-part color conflict but it is not wrong. It is simply less flexible and more coupled (B) This model resolves the color conflict and is more loosely coupled but requires 2 more classes

  23. Just Plain Wrong • Some color combinations in Whole-Part relationships should immediately raise the red flag for the modeling team • As a general rule, question all aggregation and composition where color changes across the association

  24. Subsequent Blues • Description classes can have object inheritance relationships with subsequent descriptions • Generally, there will only be one green class in the chain. Greens may aggregate or collect other greens but object inheritance should be yellow-green, green-blue or blue-blue

  25. Class or Object Inheritance Courtesy Stephen R. Palmer

  26. Simple Corporate Structure Example

  27. Types of Blues • Blue Catalog Descriptions, but also Enumerations and encapsulated (plug-in) Business Rules • Each rule can have its own interface plug-in point and implementors can be hooked in at runtime

  28. Putting It All Together

  29. Law of Demeter A different view of the DNC showing the dynamic dependencies between classes. Classes only hold dependencies to their immediate neighbors The DNC is very loosely coupled

  30. LoD Compliant Sequence Diagram

  31. Wrong – not LoD Compliant

  32. Possible Component Boundaries

  33. DNC as Component Model

  34. Business Workflow Example Component Boundary A sequence of << Moment-Intervals >> can be packaged together as a component

  35. Re-usable Enterprise Components Pinks and yellows are re-usable across multiple greens – the core Enterprise Components Greens and blues are re-usable across discrete Enterprise Applications modeled as sequences of pinks

  36. Two more possible schemes

  37. One-way Dependency

  38. Resolving 2-way Dependencies

  39. More 2-way Dependencies

  40. Summary – Color Modeling • Easily learned - Easily taught • But yet, a craft - perfected over time • DNC is reliable and repeatable - a basic pattern even novice modelers can follow • Archetypes easily identified from requirements documents • Eliminates class discovery problems • Leads to elegant, robust, extensible, agile models • Take-away modeling rather than addition • Typically an order-of-magnitude speed improvement for class diagrams over traditional verb-noun approach • Only one pattern to learn!

  41. Questions?

  42. Contact Details David J. Anderson Program Manager, Microsoft dander@microsoft.com http://www.agilemanagement.net/

  43. References Object Models: Strategies, Patterns & Applications, 2nd ed., Coad, Mayfield & North, Yourdon Press, Prentice Hall, 1997 Java Modeling in Color with UML : Enterprise Components and Process, Coad, Lefebvre, De Luca, Prentice Hall, 1999 Data Model Patterns : Conventions of Thought, David Hay, Dorset House, 1996 The Coad Letter #68 - The Domain Neutral Component, Stephen R. Palmer, 2002 http://www.thecoadletter.com/article/0,1410,29697,00.html The Coad Letter #71 – From Association to DNC, Stephen R. Palmer, 2002 http://www.thecoadletter.com/article/0,1410,29683,00.html The Coad Letter #74 – Historic Values, Stephen R. Palmer, 2002 http://www.thecoadletter.com/article/0,1410,29680,00.html The Coad Letter #76 – Modeling User Roles, Stephen R. Palmer, 2002 http://www.thecoadletter.com/article/0,1410,29678,00.html The Coad Letter #77 – Object Models to DNC, Stephen R. Palmer, 2002 http://www.thecoadletter.com/article/0,1410,29677,00.html The Coad Letter #79 – The Example Teaches, Stephen R. Palmer, 2002 http://www.thecoadletter.com/article/0,1410,29675,00.html The Coad Letter #82 – Description Class Archetype, Stephen R. Palmer, 2002 http://www.thecoadletter.com/article/0,1410,29672,00.html The Coad Letter #87 – Good Ideas Behind Color Modeling, Stephen R. Palmer, 2002 http://www.thecoadletter.com/article/0,1410,29667,00.html The Coad Letter #103 – Party Time, Stephen R. Palmer, 2002 http://www.thecoadletter.com/article/0,1410,29661,00.html The Coad Letter #107 – Party Time: Modeling Legal IDs, Stephen R. Palmer, 2003 http://www.thecoadletter.com/article/0,1410,29605,00.html

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