Re: OO tutorials would be helpful
- Posted by sixs <sixs at ida.net> Mar 01, 2005
- 584 views
Hi, I was thinking of a simple program that exists( one that reads and writes a file with a windows view) and the author writing the same logic in the author's OOL. An explanation of why you created the lines in your OOL to do the process I hope this is a good idea to help people use your product. Jim CChris wrote: > > >posted by: CChris <christian.cuvier at agriculture.gouv.fr> > >sixs wrote: > > >>Hello, >>I have looked at the Object Oriented versions that have been submitted. >>I am not sure why I would use them. If there was a simple tutorial >>that described each line... >> >> >Whew! Not sure what you mean there. Each library? Each line of code in each >library? > > >>... and the overall benefit that would be helpful >>in deciding which OOP to use. I hope this is helpful. >>I appreciate all the efforts that have been made by everyone. >> >> >OOP is right when your data can have a lot of different types >with varying degrees of similarity; usual examples are car >inventories or trash recyclers. Also, it is right when you know >that the same concept will be implemented in different ways (for >instance on different computers in a network) and you don't want your users >to need to figure that out for proper operation. >For instance, you'd like to talk to a mailslot zithout caring for what the >email client or the exact protocol is. >Otherwise its costs outwigh its benefits, unless you need/wish to reuse an >existing interface while controlling and reengineering the code behind it. > >Just my experience. OOP is right for ome kinds of projects and is not >suitable to some others. > >CChris > > >>Thanks >>Jvandal >> >> > > >