July 2001
Beginner to intermediate
368 pages
6h 52m
English
When trying to design, how do you start? Do you first get the details and see how they are put together? Or do you look from the big picture and break it down. Or is there another way?
Christopher Alexander's approach is to focus on the high-level relationships—in a sense, working from the top down. Before making any design decision, he feels it is essential to understand the context of the problem we are solving. He uses patterns to define these relationships. However, more than just presenting a collection of patterns, he offers us an entire approach to design. The area about which he is writing is architecture, designing places where people live and work, but his principles apply to software design as well.
In this chapter,
I discuss ...