GOTO is a vendor independent international software development conference with more that 90 top speaker and 1300 attendees. The conference cover topics such as .Net, Java, Open Source, Agile, Architecture and Design, Web, Cloud, New Languages and Processes

Workshop: "DDD Overview (sold out)"

Track: Workshop / Time: Thursday 09:00 - 16:00 / Location: Rosenborg

This workshop gives you an overview on the basic principles and processes needed develop practically useful models, tie them into implementation and business analysis, and place them within a viable, realistic strategy.

Target: Architects, Experienced Developers, Analysts, Hands-on Technical Leaders

Suggested Prerequisites: 
Some experience with projects developing complex software systems. Familiarity with iterative development processes.

Topics Introduced:
Morning: Ubiquitous Language & Model Discovery

  • What is DDD?
  • What makes a model useful to a software project?
  • Cultivation of a model-based language to connect domain experts, developers, and the code itself
  • Exploratory interaction of technical and business people in the modeling process
  • Aggregates: A taste of rigor. This pattern addresses, at the model level, the scaling of systems in complexity, performance, and distribution

Afternoon: Strategic Design

  • Distilling the Core Domain: Focusing fine modeling and design into those subdomains where the organization distinguishes itself
  • Clarifying a shared vision
  • Context Mapping: A pragmatic approach to dealing with the diversity models and processes on real large projects with multi-team/multi-subsystem development.
  • Combining the Core Domain and Context Map to illuminate Strategic Design options for a project.

 

 

 

Eric Evans, Author of Domain Driven Design

Eric Evans

Biography: Eric Evans

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 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 2003.

Eric now leads Domain Language, Inc., a consulting group which coaches and trains teams to make their development more productive and relevant through effective application of domain modeling and design.

Software Passion: Breaking My Own Domain Models

Twitter:  @ericevans0

Website: http://www.domainlanguage.com/

Books: Domain-Driven Design: Tackling Complexity in the Heart of Software