Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Há 1 dia · Liskov Substitution Principle. The Liskov Substitution Principle, named after computer scientist Barbara Liskov, is a key concept in object-oriented programming. It states that objects of a superclass should be replaceable with objects of its subclasses without affecting the correctness of the program.

  2. Há 3 dias · Professor Barbara Liskov has had tremendous impact on the fields of programming languages, operating systems, distributed systems, and information security. Much of her early research focus was on data abstraction, modularity, and encapsulation as typified by the CLU programming language.

  3. Há 5 dias · Abstract. A DBMS allows trading consistency for efficiency through the allocation of isolation levels that are strictly weaker than serializability. The robustness problem asks whether, for a given set of transactions and a given allocation of isolation levels, every possible interleaved execution of those transactions that is ...

  4. Há 4 dias · Historical intro: As per wikipedia it was introduced by Barbara Liskov in a 1988 conference keynote that was titled Data abstraction and hierarchy. It was defined as: "Let {\displaystyle \phi (x)} Ø( x ) be a property provable about objects {\displaystyle x} ( x ) of type T .

  5. Há 3 dias · In a nutshell, Liskov's Substitution Principle is like the GPS guiding us through the coding maze. Stick to its rules, tweak our class setups, and we'll have software that's as solid as a rock.

  6. Há 5 dias · Write Code That's Easy to Maintain. Maintaining a codebase that's easy to read and understand not only contributes to the developer experience, it also has a direct impact on the performance of the team. During this course, we'll cover techniques for designing your code in such a way that will make it easy to extend and maintain in the long run.

  7. Há 4 dias · My doctoral dissertation focuses on context-oriented programming and language-level techniques for adaptive software.Visiting Ph.D. student, Fall 2011, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, Supervisor: Prof. Barbara Liskov.