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Forum posts by Dan Haywood:Posted in All Buzz Forum, Jan 28, 2010, 12:41 AM
I've started work on moving Tested Objects' FitNesse support onto the latest version of FitNesse, using the new SLIM protocol. Now for the previous version I manually installed the fitnesse.jar into my local Maven repository and also scp'ed it up to the release repository on StarObjects. This time round ...
Posted in Java Buzz Forum, Jan 28, 2010, 12:41 AM
I've started work on moving Tested Objects' FitNesse support onto the latest version of FitNesse, using the new SLIM protocol. Now for the previous version I manually installed the fitnesse.jar into my local Maven repository and also scp'ed it up to the release repository on StarObjects. This time round ...
Posted in All Buzz Forum, Jan 27, 2010, 12:41 AM
If you've just stumbled across this blog and are wondering what "domain driven design" is all about, you might like to check out an article I wrote for the Methods and Tools journal. It's downloadable in their (free) PDF magazine, and is also available online in HTML form. Thanks to ...
Posted in Java Buzz Forum, Jan 27, 2010, 12:41 AM
If you've just stumbled across this blog and are wondering what "domain driven design" is all about, you might like to check out an article I wrote for the Methods and Tools journal. It's downloadable in their (free) PDF magazine, and is also available online in HTML form. Thanks to ...
Posted in All Buzz Forum, Jan 9, 2010, 9:18 PM
Still building my dev env on Mac OS X, and here's another trick that some googling around has thrown up: put the local Maven repo (in ~/.m2/repository) onto a Ram disk. Doing this lets me build the complete Naked Objects distribution in something just over 2 minutes; an order of magnitude ...
Posted in Java Buzz Forum, Jan 9, 2010, 9:18 PM
Still building my dev env on Mac OS X, and here's another trick that some googling around has thrown up: put the local Maven repo (in ~/.m2/repository) onto a Ram disk. Doing this lets me build the complete Naked Objects distribution in something just over 2 minutes; an order of magnitude ...
Posted in All Buzz Forum, Jan 9, 2010, 3:17 PM
Although I'm reasonably proficient with UNIX and I love its design, for most of my professional life I've used Windows; its environment I'm comfortable with, I know the keystrokes, I can be pretty productive etc etc. But it seems that all the cool kids doing developers use Macs, and I ...
Posted in Java Buzz Forum, Jan 9, 2010, 3:17 PM
Although I'm reasonably proficient with UNIX and I love its design, for most of my professional life I've used Windows; its environment I'm comfortable with, I know the keystrokes, I can be pretty productive etc etc. But it seems that all the cool kids doing developers use Macs, and I ...
Posted in All Buzz Forum, Jan 7, 2010, 1:18 AM
One of the things I like once Christmas is over is to read those end-of-year reviews and stories in magazines and newspapers (happy new year, by the way). Here was a story that I read in "The Week" that made me laugh. But it's also is a pretty fair reflection ...
Posted in Java Buzz Forum, Jan 7, 2010, 1:18 AM
One of the things I like once Christmas is over is to read those end-of-year reviews and stories in magazines and newspapers (happy new year, by the way). Here was a story that I read in "The Week" that made me laugh. But it's also is a pretty fair reflection ...
Posted in All Buzz Forum, Dec 18, 2009, 12:37 AM
In case you missed the announcement from the pragprog newsletter, the book is now in print. Just in time for the holidays!
Posted in Java Buzz Forum, Dec 18, 2009, 12:37 AM
In case you missed the announcement from the pragprog newsletter, the book is now in print. Just in time for the holidays!
Posted in All Buzz Forum, Dec 15, 2009, 12:37 AM
I've been delivering my TDD course today, one topic of which is writing custom matchers in Hamcrest. One topic that came up was in asserting state within large object graphs, so it struck me that a nice general purpose matcher would be one that used an expression language to ...
Posted in Java Buzz Forum, Dec 15, 2009, 12:37 AM
I've been delivering my TDD course today, one topic of which is writing custom matchers in Hamcrest. One topic that came up was in asserting state within large object graphs, so it struck me that a nice general purpose matcher would be one that used an expression language to ...
Posted in All Buzz Forum, Dec 8, 2009, 2:37 AM
In the previous post in this series we saw how the Naked Objects metamodel uses Facets to allow arbitrary metadata to be associated to the classes, properties, collections or actions. We've already explored the well-defined facets that are used to capture presentation semantics and to enable interactions, but we ...
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