Subscribe | About Us | Feedback
Today in Manufacturing.Net

Resources
Bookstore
Career Center
Events Calendar
Links
White Papers

Free White Papers

News
Featured Articles
Financial News
Global Manufacturing
Government News
Mergers & Acquisitions
News Archive
People in the News

Amazon

Market Sectors
Aerospace
Automotive/Transportation
Chemical/Petroleum
Food/Beverage
Medical
Metals
Pharmaceuticals/Biotech
Plastics/Rubber
Other Manufacturing

Industry Focus
Design & Development
Electrical & Electronics
Energy
Environmental
Facilities & Operations
Labor Relations
Manufacturing Technology
Materials
Quality
Safety
Supply Chain

Career Center
CareerBuilder.com


About Us
Editorial Contacts
Advertise with Us

Our Partner Sites
Chem.Info
ECN
Food Manufacturing
IMPO (Industrial Maintenance & Plant Operation)
Medical Design Technology
Pharmaceutical Processing
Product Design & Development
R & D Magazine
Wireless Design & Development
Wireless Week




Search the Library
 
Home>

Accelerating Your Object-Oriented Development

Objectivity
By : Objectivity
INFORMATION
Published : Dec 20, 2005
Length : 24
Type : White Paper
 
Download Now
Save for Later
  Email This Page
Overview :

This paper is an overview of the issues that arise from implementing object persistence with a relational database. The basis for this paper is our recent experience with Object-Oriented projects that used relational database technology. Those experiences have shown us that the cost of mixing the two paradigms is very high and can seriously detract from the benefits of Object-Oriented development.

There is no question that object-to-relational solutions can be made to work, but at what price? This paper describes approaches to building object-to-relational bridges and highlights problems and compromises that typically arise. This is not a guide to implementing an object-to-relational bridge; instead, its purpose is to explain some fundamental issues and provide information that would be useful in making a database technology selection.

This paper is most pertinent in the context of programming languages that have little or no native support for object persistence, such as C++. Download this white paper to learn more.

View All Items By This Company
Browse Related Categories :
C++ , Database Development , Software Development , Web Services
Search the Library
This Weeks Most Popular Reports Most Popular Topics Vendor Directory
White Papers
   Learn about White Paper Lead Generation opportunities