Defining Data-Driven Software Development /

Every year, developers learn new frameworks and languages not only to enhance productivity, but also to stay relevant in an ever-changing industry. And yet there's always a chance that tools you learn today won't be around next year. So you end up wasting your time, and worse, you waste th...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Laquer, Eric (Author)
Corporate Author: Safari, an O'Reilly Media Company
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: O'Reilly Media, Inc., 2017.
Edition:1st edition.
Subjects:
Online Access:Connect to this electronic resource

MARC

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520 |a Every year, developers learn new frameworks and languages not only to enhance productivity, but also to stay relevant in an ever-changing industry. And yet there's always a chance that tools you learn today won't be around next year. So you end up wasting your time, and worse, you waste the opportunity to learn something more relevant. This report examines the benefits of developing on a multi-model database that supports document, graph, relational, key-value, and other data models. Author Eric Laquer of MarkLogic describes tools and techniques for working directly with data as it arrives from the source, enabling your team to explore, on the fly, what a potential solution for a customer will look like. By leveraging what you already know about modeling and indexing data, a multi-model database will help you apply data management to the DevOps model and move past the limitations of rows and tables altogether. This report explores: How multi-model database management systems support a data-driven approach to software development Why applications that support data integration and analytic use cases can break a relational data model Case studies of two Fortune 50 companies that successfully adopted multi-model databases Why a data-driven approach requires collaboration among DBAs, sysadmins, analysts, and compliance and risk managers 
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