⇤ ← Revision 1 as of 2013-06-19 02:37:21
Size: 1433
Comment:
|
Size: 1185
Comment:
|
Deletions are marked like this. | Additions are marked like this. |
Line 3: | Line 3: |
In August of 1993, Kent Beck and Grady Booch sponsored a mountain retreat in Colorado where a group converged on foundations for software patterns. Ward Cunningham, Ralph Johnson, Ken Auer, Hal Hildebrand, Grady Booch, Kent Beck and Jim Coplien struggled with Alexander's ideas and our own experiences to forge a marriage of objects and patterns. The Group agreed that we were ready to build on Erich Gamma's foundation work studying object-oriented patterns, to use patterns in a generative way in the sense that Christopher Alexander uses patterns for urban planning and building architecture. We then used the term generative to mean creational to distinguish them from Gamma patterns that captured observations. The Group was meeting on the side of a hill when all this occurred, hence the name.[3] | In August of 1993, KentBeck and GradyBooch sponsored a mountain retreat in Colorado where a group converged on foundations for software patterns. WardCunningham, RalphJohnson, KenAuer, Hal Hildebrand, GradyBooch, KentBeck and JimCoplien struggled with ChristopherAlexander's ideas and our own experiences to forge a marriage of objects and patterns. The Group agreed that we were ready to build on ErichGamma's foundation work studying object-oriented patterns, to use PatternLanguage in a generative way in the sense that ChristopherAlexander uses PatternLanguage for urban planning and building architecture. We then used the term generative to mean creational to distinguish them from Gamma patterns that captured observations. The Group was meeting on the side of a hill when all this occurred, hence the name.[3] |
Line 5: | Line 5: |
Since then, the Hillside Group has been incorporated as an educational non-profit. It currently sponsors and helps run various PLoP (Pattern Languages of Programming) conferences[4] such as GuruPLoP, PLoP, EuroPlop, ChiliPlop, GuruPLoP, Asian PLoP, Scrum PLoP, Viking PLoP and Sugarloaf PLoP. Following are a list of historical PLoP conferences sponsored by The Hillside Group: ParaPLoP, KoalaPLoP, Mensore PLoP, ParaPLoP, Meta PLoP and UP97) The Hillside Group has also been responsible for getting the Pattern Languages Of Program Design series of books put together and published. [5] | Since then, the Hillside Group has been incorporated as an educational non-profit. It currently sponsors and helps run various PLoP (Pattern Languages of Programming) conferences. The Hillside Group has also been responsible for getting the Pattern Languages Of Program Design series of books put together and published. [5] |
Hillside Group
In August of 1993, KentBeck and GradyBooch sponsored a mountain retreat in Colorado where a group converged on foundations for software patterns. WardCunningham, RalphJohnson, KenAuer, Hal Hildebrand, GradyBooch, KentBeck and JimCoplien struggled with ChristopherAlexander's ideas and our own experiences to forge a marriage of objects and patterns. The Group agreed that we were ready to build on ErichGamma's foundation work studying object-oriented patterns, to use PatternLanguage in a generative way in the sense that ChristopherAlexander uses PatternLanguage for urban planning and building architecture. We then used the term generative to mean creational to distinguish them from Gamma patterns that captured observations. The Group was meeting on the side of a hill when all this occurred, hence the name.[3]
Since then, the Hillside Group has been incorporated as an educational non-profit. It currently sponsors and helps run various PLoP (Pattern Languages of Programming) conferences. The Hillside Group has also been responsible for getting the Pattern Languages Of Program Design series of books put together and published. [5]
-- wikipedia