OOM

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AcronymDefinition
OOMOut of Memory
OOMOrder of Melchizedek
OOMObject Oriented Manager
OOMOpen Office Master Document
OOMObject Oriented Modeling
OOMObject Oriented Method
OOMObject Oriented Middleware
OOMOracle Order Management
OOMOrientated Office Model
OOMOutlook Object Model
OOMOut of Mana (gaming)
OOMOut Of Mana (Everquest)
OOMOrder of Merit (police)
OOMOrder Of Magnitude
OOMOut of Mind (gaming, Red Vs. Blue)
OOMObject-Oriented Modeling
OOMOut Of Money
OOMCooma, New South Wales, Australia (Airport Code)
OOMObject-Oriented Methods
OOMOmron Oilfield and Marine (Houston, TX)
OOMOrchester Osnabrücker Musikfreunde (German: Friends of Music Orchestra Osnabrück; Osnabrück, Germany)
OOMOffice of the Mayor
OOMOne-to-One Marketing
OOMOrbicularis Oculi Muscle
OOMOut of Material
OOMOptimized Online Media
OOMOrder of Movement
OOMOil Offshore Marine
OOMOil of Milk (solution used by magicians)
OOMOlympics of the Mind (academia)
OOMOn-Orbit Maintenance
OOMOpen Ocean Missiles
OOMOrder of the Myths (Mobile, AL)
OOMOnline Order Management
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References in periodicals archive ?
For example, software development has utilized object-oriented methods since 1988 (Wieringa, 1998) and now frequently use this method to develop business IS (Fedorowicz and Villeneuve, 1999).
With object-oriented methods, each system can build various types of independent functioning components.
In the short time since 1988, at least 19 object-oriented methods have been proposed in book form and many more have been proposed in conference and journal papers.
This framework is based upon the philosophy of systems engineering and is general enough to accommodate structured as well as object-oriented methods without distorting the characteristic philosophy of these methods.
Representing abstractions is a prominent issue causing object-oriented methods to gain acceptance as a viable alternative for high-performance parallel computation.
Development and implementation are where object-oriented methods are beneficial, since abstractions relevant to the application can be created to simplify the programming process.
Most of the widely used object-oriented methods, described in the literature, advocate the iterative approach.
They would almost unanimously prefer to use the process method rather than JSD or object-oriented methods.
Object-oriented methods already emphasize certain patterns of relationships, including generalization-specialization, whole-part, association, and messaging (3, 4, 9).
What was almost totally lacking in the Communications articles was any statement about the limitations and drawbacks of object-oriented methods. The only exception I noticed was in the article on C++, which suggested that the mixed paragigm of C++ provided an easy migration path for people who had been programming in C.
The unique components developed by object-oriented methods are characterized by an interface that is separate from the implementation of that behavior.
The decentralized architecture of object-oriented methods is the key to this approach.
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