Since the publication of the Design Patterns book (E. Gamma et
al., 1994), a large number of object-oriented design patterns have been
identified and codified. As part of the pattern form, object-oriented
design patterns must indicate their relationships with other patterns,
but these relationships are typically described very briefly, and
different collections of patterns describe different relationships in
different ways. In this paper, we describe and classify the common
relationships between object-oriented design patterns. Practitioners can
use these relationships to help them identity those patterns which may
be applicable to a particular problem, and pattern writers can use these
relationships to help them integrate new patterns into the body of the
patterns literature
%0 Conference Paper
%1 Noble:1998
%A Noble, J.
%B Software Engineering Conference, 1998. Proceedings. 1998 Australian
%D 1998
%K research.conceptual.patterns research.cs.architecture research.cs.design
%P 98-107
%R 10.1109/ASWEC.1998.730917
%T Classifying relationships between object-oriented design patterns
%U http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpl/freeabs_all.jsp?arnumber=730917
%X Since the publication of the Design Patterns book (E. Gamma et
al., 1994), a large number of object-oriented design patterns have been
identified and codified. As part of the pattern form, object-oriented
design patterns must indicate their relationships with other patterns,
but these relationships are typically described very briefly, and
different collections of patterns describe different relationships in
different ways. In this paper, we describe and classify the common
relationships between object-oriented design patterns. Practitioners can
use these relationships to help them identity those patterns which may
be applicable to a particular problem, and pattern writers can use these
relationships to help them integrate new patterns into the body of the
patterns literature
%@ 0-8186-9187-5
@inproceedings{Noble:1998,
abstract = {Since the publication of the Design Patterns book (E. Gamma et
al., 1994), a large number of object-oriented design patterns have been
identified and codified. As part of the pattern form, object-oriented
design patterns must indicate their relationships with other patterns,
but these relationships are typically described very briefly, and
different collections of patterns describe different relationships in
different ways. In this paper, we describe and classify the common
relationships between object-oriented design patterns. Practitioners can
use these relationships to help them identity those patterns which may
be applicable to a particular problem, and pattern writers can use these
relationships to help them integrate new patterns into the body of the
patterns literature},
added-at = {2007-08-22T09:28:33.000+0200},
author = {Noble, J.},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/248fd1cab1e9aaf6ef2abdc41c62d5e95/msn},
booktitle = {Software Engineering Conference, 1998. Proceedings. 1998 Australian},
doi = {10.1109/ASWEC.1998.730917},
interhash = {1726d3ed65291386104e51c64ad94b09},
intrahash = {48fd1cab1e9aaf6ef2abdc41c62d5e95},
isbn = {0-8186-9187-5},
keywords = {research.conceptual.patterns research.cs.architecture research.cs.design},
pages = {98-107},
timestamp = {2007-08-22T09:30:18.000+0200},
title = {Classifying relationships between object-oriented design patterns},
url = {http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpl/freeabs_all.jsp?arnumber=730917},
year = 1998
}