vote up 9 vote down star

Hi, I'm thinking of buying Martin Fowler's "Patterns of Enterprise Application Architecture".

From what I can see it seems like a great book, it an architectural book with bias towards enterprise Java -- just what I need.

However, in computer years, it is quite old. 2003 was a long time ago, and things have moved on quite a bit since that time.

So I'm wondering if anyone can tell me: is this book still relevant, and worth the read?

Thanks

flag
People still tend to cite GoF. – Tom Hawtin - tackline Mar 28 at 12:11

7 Answers

vote up 18 vote down check

Yes, it is still very relevant and an excellent resource.

link|flag
1  
+7 for "yes"... I love SO :) – Ian Quigley Apr 1 at 14:26
vote up 1 vote down

I disagree with the "bias towards Java" statement. Patterns, by their nature, are language-agnostic. They're defined as solutions to common problems. The copy of Fowler's book has examples in both Java and C#, so I can't see where the "bias" comes in. They're the most common object-oriented languages, and he's talking about object-oriented solutions to enterprise problems.

The GoF book has examples in Smalltalk and C++. Why are they so "biased" against Java and C#? Hint: the languages didn't exist when that book was written, but the patterns are as relevant as ever.

link|flag
Well, I haven't read the book, so I don't really know... I didn't mean bias in a bad way. It probably would have been more correct to say "the common object-oriented languages used in the enterprise", but I'm a Java guy -- when I think "object-oriented language used in the enterprise" I think Java. – Jack Mar 28 at 22:31
Agreed, but other people reading your comment might think you had read it and shy away because they aren't Java folk. I wanted to clarify. – duffymo Mar 29 at 14:15
vote up 5 vote down

It's very relevant. I frequently refer other developers to particular patterns from that book, as links to his site (http://www.martinfowler.com/eaaCatalog/), such as Data Transfer Object and Service Layer.

The latter is one I thought I had invented until I saw that Fowler had already written about it.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

It's currently the textbook used at my university's Principles of Information Systems Design course.

link|flag
vote up 6 vote down

This book, and Eric Evans book about Domain-Driven Design, are my books of the year - every year ;) ...

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Yes the book is still relevant. You can pickup used copies on Amazon if you are worried about its value and sell it through the same channel.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Absolutely!

The book is a classic. I've just been re-reading it to help with some work on event-driven accounting systems.

Fowler has been revisiting some of the patterns since and you can see his works in progress.

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.