| R. Ben-Natan. Corba. McGraw-Hill, 1995. |
....to message passing systems is often di#cult. Support of fault tolerance is often limited or is an add on feature in these systems [44] which increases the 92 programming di#culty. In addition to the basic primitives like send recv, remote procedure calls [46] and distributed objects (i.e. CORBA [8]) are built on top of message passing to provide a more convenient means of communication between tasks. The programmers can concentrate on dividing the functions of a program across the network since they are relieved from message composition and data marshaling. Beside user convenience and ....
R. Ben-Natan. Corba. McGraw-Hill, 1995.
....system complain about it; or, that for every object o1 of type B there is an object o2 of type D such that the behavior of every program (defined in terms of B) is unchanged when o2 is substituted for o1. These are usually called respectively Liskov s weak and strong substitution principles[2]. Consider an example. Suppose we have a stack of integers and a queue of integers. Each provides a get operation and a put operation. So if we only required the weak substitution principle above, a stack could be considered a derived type of queue or vice versa. But a program that works ....
R. Ben-Natan, CORBA, McGraw-Hill, 1995.
....provide powerful image processing tools, as well image retrieval and storage mechanisms, manage various data from various sources, and integrate different software packages. Recent software developments, such as the Java programming language [4] and the CORBA distributed object technology [5], meet the needs un derlying these distributed EMISs, simplifying their development, maintenance and portability. This paper describes the design and implementation of the first prototype of a distributed EMIS suitable for the visualisation and processing of medical images from different ....
....must be scalable, in order to lead the simple addition of new segmentation algorithms or other useful system components without requiring the rewriting of the system. 3 Solution: Java and Distributed Object Technology The Java programming language [4] and the CORBA distributed object technology [5] have met the requirements underlying the design of the system listed above. Java is an object oriented programming language that has sparked over the past two years considerable interest among software developers. Besides the properties that it has in common with other OO languages (modularity, ....
R. Ben-Natan: CORBA - A Guide to Common Object Request Broker Architecture. McGraw-Hill, 1995.
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R. Ben-Nathar: CORBA: A guide to Common Object Request Broker Architecture. McGraw-Hill. 1995.
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R. Ben-Nathar: CORBA: A guide to Common Object Request Broker Architecture. McGraw-Hill. 1995.
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R./Ben-Nathar:/CORBA:/A/guide/to/Common/Object/Request/Broker Architecture,/McGraw-Hill,/1995.
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