Domain-Driven Design Purch
Tuesday 2 pm to 5:30 pm
Abstract: Large information systems need a domain model. Development teams know this, yet they often end up with little more than data schemas which do not deliver on the productivity promises for object design. This tutorial delves into how a team, developers and domain experts together, can engage in progressively deeper exploration of their problem domain while making that understanding tangible as a practical software design. This model is not just a diagram or an analysis artifact. It provides the very foundation of the design, the driving force of analysis, even the basis of the language spoken on the project.
The tutorial will focus on three topics:
- The conscious use of language on the project to refine and communicate models and strengthen the connection with the implementation.
- A subtly different style of refactoring aimed at deepening model insight, in addition to making technical improvements to the code.
- A brief look at strategic design, which is crucial to larger projects. These are the decisions where design and politics often intersect.
The tutorial will include group reading and discussion of selected patterns from the book "Domain-Driven Design," Addison-Wesley 2003, and reenactments of domain modeling scenarios.
Bio: Eric Evans is a specialist in domain modeling and design in large business systems. Since the early 1990s, he has worked on many projects developing large business systems with objects and has been deeply involved in applying modeling and Agile processes on real projects. Out of this range of experiences emerged the synthesis of principles and techniques shared in the book "Domain-Driven Design," Addison-Wesley 2004. Eric now leads "Domain Language", a consulting group which coaches and trains teams to make their development more productive through effective application of domain modeling and design.