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This glossary supports the following titles:


SOA: Principles of Service Design (ISBN: 01323 44823, Prentice Hall)

Service-Oriented Architecture: Concepts, Technology, and Design (ISBN: 0131858580, Prentice Hall)

Service-Oriented Architecture: A Field Guide to Integrating XML & Web Services (ISBN: 0131 428985, Prentice Hall)

For more information about this book series, visit: www.soabooks.com

design paradigm

There are many meanings associated with the term “paradigm.” It can be an approach to something, a school of thought regarding something, or a combined set of rules that are applied within a predefined boundary.

A design paradigm within the context of business automation is generally considered a governing approach to designing solution logic. It normally consists of a set of complementary rules or principles that collectively define the overarching approach represented by the paradigm.


Figure: Because a design paradigm represents a collection of design principles, it further increases the degree of commonality across different bodies of solution logic. In the example, the amount of reuse in A and B has increased.

Object-orientation (or object-oriented design) is a classic example of an accepted design paradigm. It provides a set of principles that shape componentized solution logic in certain ways so as to fulfill a specific set of goals.

Along those very same lines, service-orientation represents its own distinct design paradigm. Like object-orientation, it is a paradigm that applies to distributed solution logic. However, its principles differ from those associated with object-orientation, which results in the creation of different types of design characteristics.

Note that the service-orientation design paradigm is documented separately at www.soaprinciples.com.

See also:

- best practice

- design characteristic

- design pattern

- design pattern language

- design principle

- design standard

The Prentice Hall Service-Oriented Computing Series from Thomas Erl
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