Post by Admin on Jul 23, 2018 23:17:27 GMT
So reading 'Object-Oriented Databases', by James G. Hughes. (1991)
Referencing for origins of Ada:
Ichbiah, J. et al [1979] Rationale for the Design of the Programming Language Ada, ACM SIGPLAN Notices 14, N0. 6.
www.amazon.com/Rationale-Design-Programming-Language-Companion/dp/0521392675
Rationale for the design of the Ada programming language / J. Ichbiah [and others]. (1991)
Ada
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ada_(programming_language)
Jean David Ichbiah
it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean_Ichbiah
Time Line Of Computer Languages, most interesting
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_programming_languages
So this kind of a 1991 book is not going to talk about these new NoSQL databases like MongoDB.
But it does give one a sense of the sorts of situations when you would find a Relational Database to be inadequate.
Now every few years, new acronyms are introduced. They talk about Computer Aided Design, Computer Integrated Manufacturing, and Computer Aided Software Engineering.
As I see it, the idea is the same as what is behind the drive to object oriented languages, the encapsulation of variables, and these 'methods'.
So to me, you would want it for these Manufacturing Execution Systems, and for these Enterprise Resource Planning Systems. And I know there are more things where databases could be better used.
But the object oriented database idea has been around now for a long time. Some had talked about it as an idea which would best be abandoned. So this is why I am so interested in old books, to better understand how this all has unfolded.
Actually there are zillions of books about this subject, for a next one I consider:
C++ object databases : programming with the ODMG standard / David Jordan ; [foreword by Rick Cattell] (1998)
Referencing for origins of Ada:
Ichbiah, J. et al [1979] Rationale for the Design of the Programming Language Ada, ACM SIGPLAN Notices 14, N0. 6.
www.amazon.com/Rationale-Design-Programming-Language-Companion/dp/0521392675
Rationale for the design of the Ada programming language / J. Ichbiah [and others]. (1991)
Ada
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ada_(programming_language)
Jean David Ichbiah
it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean_Ichbiah
Time Line Of Computer Languages, most interesting
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_programming_languages
So this kind of a 1991 book is not going to talk about these new NoSQL databases like MongoDB.
But it does give one a sense of the sorts of situations when you would find a Relational Database to be inadequate.
Now every few years, new acronyms are introduced. They talk about Computer Aided Design, Computer Integrated Manufacturing, and Computer Aided Software Engineering.
As I see it, the idea is the same as what is behind the drive to object oriented languages, the encapsulation of variables, and these 'methods'.
So to me, you would want it for these Manufacturing Execution Systems, and for these Enterprise Resource Planning Systems. And I know there are more things where databases could be better used.
But the object oriented database idea has been around now for a long time. Some had talked about it as an idea which would best be abandoned. So this is why I am so interested in old books, to better understand how this all has unfolded.
Actually there are zillions of books about this subject, for a next one I consider:
C++ object databases : programming with the ODMG standard / David Jordan ; [foreword by Rick Cattell] (1998)