1,430 research outputs found
Kulturlandschaft Deutschland
KULTURLANDSCHAFT DEUTSCHLAND
Kulturlandschaft Deutschland / Zimmermann, Olaf [Hrsg.] (Rights reserved) (-
AsyncMDSL: a domain-specific language for modeling message-based systems
In this thesis, we propose a new domain-specific language (AsyncMDSL) for describing message-based systems in a concise and human-friendly way. AsyncMDSL extends the Microservice DSL (MDSL) language recently proposed by Olaf Zimmermann with patterns and concepts from Hohpe and Woolf’s Enterprise Integration Patterns book and from the open-source initiative AysncAPI. After introducing AsyncMDSL, we describe the design and implementation of an automated converter capable of generating enriched AsyncAPI documents from AsyncMDSL specifications
Supplemental Material - Does Rude or Kind Behavior Predict Later Academic Achievement? Evidence From Two Samples of Adolescents
Supplemental Material for Does Rude or Kind Behavior Predict Later Academic Achievement? Evidence From Two Samples of Adolescents by Julia Becherer, Olaf Köller, and Friederike Zimmermann in The Journal of Early Adolescence</p
Differential responsiveness of CRF receptor subtypes to N-terminal truncation of peptidic ligands
Distributed Information Services in Physics
The concept of distributed information services maintained by a distributed work force for scientific information is described. Realizations and experiences for Physics (since 1995), Marine Sciences, and dissertation theses in physics are presented. Technically the information is gathered from the local web servers of the worldwide distributed research institutes and departments, by distributed Harvest-gatherers, under the control of national learned societies or regional other institutions. Queries are answered by a network of mirrors of Harvest-brokers. For PhysNet, a Charter sets the rules to assure a noncommercial, free full-text access service, under the control of the set of national national learned societies involved, but unbiased to any single one
Guideline for the Creation of Open Educational Resources : Information and Practical Excercises for Lecturers in Higher Education
University of Graz, 2018
Published by Open Education Austria
Author: Claudia Zimmermann
English translation: Claudia Zimmermann
Sincere thanks to the project team of Open Education Austria: Paolo Budroni, Martin Ebner, Raman Ganguly, Ortrun Gröblinger, Christoph Jokubonis, Michael Kopp, Karin Lach, Sylvia Lingo, Felix Schmitt, Charlotte Zwiauer
Graphic design: Lukas Schnabel & Claudia Zimmermann
This project was funded by the Austrian Federal Ministry of Education, Science and Research.
Legal disclaimer: All information is supplied without warranty. Author and publisher assume no liability
Introduction to Microservice API Patterns (MAP)
The Microservice API Patterns (MAP) language and supporting website premiered under this name at Microservices 2019. MAP distills proven, platform- and technology-independent solutions to recurring (micro-)service design and interface specification problems such as finding well-fitting service granularities, rightsizing message representations, and managing the evolution of APIs and their implementations. In this paper, we motivate the need for such a pattern language, outline the language organization and present two exemplary patterns describing alternative options for representing nested data. We also identify future research and development directions
Interview with Jens Zimmermann: Author of ‘Hermeneutics: A Very Short Introduction’
Dr. Jens Zimmermann is a German-Canadian philosopher and J.I. Packer Professor of Theology at Regent College. As the author of Hermeneutics: A Very Short Introduction, he held a lecture titled “Gadamer, Ricoeur and the Future of Philosophical Hermeneutics” at SFU. Hosted by the Department of World Languages and Literatures, the lecture focused on how we can use the art of hermeneutics to interpret literature and our identities of being human
Patterns on Designing API Endpoint Operations
Domain-driven design (DDD) is often applied when implementing microservices or communicating through APIs in distributed systems. APIs expose a published language that provides a view on entire domain models or subsets of such models. Hence, tactical DDD patterns such as Aggregate, Service, and Entity may not only structure API implementations, but also guide API specification work. In our previous work, we described endpoint-level patterns for this context. In this paper, we present three complementary patterns, namely Aggregated Domain Operation on API Endpoint, Event-Based API Endpoint Operation, and CRUD-Based API Operation. These patterns aim to derive API operations from the operations of Domain Services and Entities as well as Domain Events. We also discuss variants of these patterns, such as their combination with the patterns Command Query Responsibility Segregation (CQRS) and Publish/Subscribe. Our pattern mining work is based on a data set from an empirical study of 32 grey literature sources investigating practitioner views on deriving API designs from DDD models.The work of Cesare Pautasso and Uwe Zdun was supported by the API-ACE project, funded by SNF project 184692 and FWF (Austrian Science Fund) project I 4268. The work of Olaf Zimmermann is partially funded by the Hasler Foundation (DD-DSE, QDAR)
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