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Comments and Discussions
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Thanks Negm, it is such a great news! any time table for it so far, and which version of the CSLA.net would it be tageted? cheers!
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This project looks great. The only alternative project I know is AndroMDA. Are you going to develop a Java version based on JEE? The java version could use MSVS with some modules to generate EJB3 and JPA.
thks!
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While we search for similar projects we found Andromda, Andormda very powerful in java but have some weakness in .NET.
I do not think that we will look at java in the near future because that .NET community has some how lack in the Model-Driven development trend, and we will try to fill this gap .
Negm
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In fact I was wrong, there is a project very similar based on JEE and Eclipse. It is called Taylor UML. I recommend you to take a look at it. It seems to be more mature than Mold but it is really buggy. Yet it has very interesting ideas such as Stereotype-Annotation mapping. In .NET there is a similar Java Annotations idea using box brackets. For example, in Enterprise Services you can use [Transaction(TransactionOption.Required)].
Hope it helps to improve your project.
bye.
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Sorry if I am being too stressing, I just want to give you ideas.
There I have another idea I have not found in Sculpture that exists in AndroMDA.
The idea is to add Role-based security using UML Actors. If a service class depends on an actor (dependency link) then to call any of the service operations one need to have the Role of that actor.
It is to say, if DepartmentService has a dependency on Manager Actor then it should be generated the following code:
[PrincipalPermissionAttribute(SecurityAction.Demand, Role="Manager")]
You could use Use Case diagrams for this purpuse. If an actor is linked to a use case and this use case is linked to a Service Class then this actor is allowed to call the operations of that service class. It is more complex than the other method but this way you can use Use Case diagrams to directly model Role-based security.
Obviously you can use State Diagrams for Web Page Navigation generation and Activity Diagrams for Workflow generation
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pilates_elates,
Thank you for all of your invaluable contributions and ideas. We will take care of all of that.
If any new ideas, you are always welcome.
Thanks for your interest
Negm
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Hey another word you USA guys have for yourselves. Mold???? Down here it's Mould! Well at least it's another new word I found for the day.
I think I can now say I'm bilingual. I know English and Yankish....
Great article by the way
Peter Hayward
Ngarkat Technologies
South Australia,
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Hi Peter,
You can call it Mould if you like that
The most important that you like the project.
By the way
Peter Hayward wrote: USA guys
We are not USA guys
Negm
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Ahmed Negm wrote: We are not USA guys
Let me guess, you are egyption?
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Sure Egyptian
My Best Regards to Lebanon people
Negm
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General News Suggestion Question Bug Answer Joke Rant Admin
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This article introduces how to create and manage .NET enterprise applications using your favorite technology (Data Access Application Block, LINQ, NHibernate, ASMX, and WCF) with the Model Driven Development approach by Sculpture.
| Type | Article |
| Licence | CPOL |
| First Posted | 3 Sep 2008 |
| Views | 48,918 |
| Downloads | 472 |
| Bookmarked | 111 times |
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