ObjectsInGroups

Last edit December 31, 1999
As was discussed in MultiCaster, it is very useful (especially in distributed applications) to organize agents in "groups".

From DougLea's paper of the same name:

An object-oriented application may consist of a sea of objects; perhaps thousands or millions of objects. Subsets of these objects often possess discernible structure that is not well-captured by common object- and class-based concepts and notations... ...a group is a special kind of set, consisting of one or more objects ( members) bearing a common abstract relation, common external access policies, common connectivity, and common internal policies.

You can read the paper here: http://gee.cs.oswego.edu/dl/groups/groups.html

Some practical examples of "objects in groups":

This was one of those "aha!" concepts that opened my mind to the great possibilities of widely distributed computing.

--StuCharlton