A Pure Object-oriented Domain Model by a DB Guy, Part 2
n the previous article (Part 1, see left column) I showed the diagram illustrated in Figure 1. However, I didn’t say very much about it, so now is a good
n the previous article (Part 1, see left column) I showed the diagram illustrated in Figure 1. However, I didn’t say very much about it, so now is a good
uppose you’re writing a query to find all the invoices that were written on January 6, 2003. You know from the control totals that 122 invoices were written that day.
n this article, I will concentrate on the critical differences in the processing model implemented by HttpHandlers versus that implemented by HttpModules. I’ll be presenting specific coding samples as necessary
ethods for sorting have been intensively studied and optimized.
enerally, when a good programmer has to design a type (or a hierarchy of types), he does an analysis of the problem and then starts to write properties and methods
am sure you have already found out why you should be wary of static, application-global and module-global variables in COM+ components written in VB. As for me, one wonderful day
et’s face it. Caching is a fancy was of saying that you are going to save some type of data somewhere. In the n-tier web application model, your tiers are
he Pool Manager described in the first part of this article series had a couple of problems. The process of acquiring a pooled object was not transparent to the client,
Implementing Object Pooling with .NET Remoting Part I As you probably know, Object Pooling is a powerful feature available when hosting .NET or COM components in a COM+ application. I