Book Image

Modern Programming: Object Oriented Programming and Best Practices

By : Graham Lee
Book Image

Modern Programming: Object Oriented Programming and Best Practices

By: Graham Lee

Overview of this book

Your experience and knowledge always influence the approach you take and the tools you use to write your programs. With a sound understanding of how to approach your goal and what software paradigms to use, you can create high-performing applications quickly and efficiently. In this two-part book, you’ll discover the untapped features of object-oriented programming and use it with other software tools to code fast and efficient applications. The first part of the book begins with a discussion on how OOP is used today and moves on to analyze the ideas and problems that OOP doesn’t address. It continues by deconstructing the complexity of OOP, showing you its fundamentally simple core. You’ll see that, by using the distinctive elements of OOP, you can learn to build your applications more easily. The next part of this book talks about acquiring the skills to become a better programmer. You’ll get an overview of how various tools, such as version control and build management, help make your life easier. This book also discusses the pros and cons of other programming paradigms, such as aspect-oriented programming and functional programming, and helps to select the correct approach for your projects. It ends by talking about the philosophy behind designing software and what it means to be a "good" developer. By the end of this two-part book, you will have learned that OOP is not always complex, and you will know how you can evolve into a better programmer by learning about ethics, teamwork, and documentation.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
Part One – OOP The Easy Way
5
Part Two – APPropriate Behavior

Programming Paradigms And Their Applicability

On one (theoretically correct, though practically unpleasing) level, all software is just comprised of loads, stores, mathematics, and jumps, so any application can be written using any tool that permits the correct ordering of those basic operations. A key theme running through this book though, is the idea of software's interpersonal nature, and here, we have a concrete example of that: the application source code as a source of mutual understanding between the programmers who work on it.

Before exploring that though, a little diversion into history, to make an idea explicit so that we can leave it behind. This is the idea of successive layers of abstraction allowing people to build on what came before. Yes, all software is built out of the basic operations described above but thinking about your problem in terms of the computer's operations is hard. Within a few years of stored-program computers being invented, EDSAC programmers created...