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When it comes to frameworks, the familiar story of the elephant and
the six blind philosophers seems to apply. As each philoso pher
encountered a separate part of the elephant, each pronounced his
considered, but flawed judgement. One blind philosopher felt a leg
and thought it a tree. Another felt the tail and thought he held a
rope. Another felt the elephant's flank and thought he stood before
a wall. We're supposed to learn about snap judgements from this
alle gory, but its author might well have been describing design
automation frameworks. For in the reality of today's product
development requirements, a framework must be many things to many
people. xiv CAD Frameworks: Integration Technology for CAD As the
authors of this book note, framework design is an optimi zation
problem. Somehow, it has to be both a superior rope for one and a
tremendous tree for another. Somehow it needs to provide a standard
environment for exploiting the full potential of computer-aided
engineering tools. And, somehow, it has to make real such
abstractions as interoperability and interchangeability. For years,
we've talked about a framework as something that provides
application-oriented services, just as an operating system provides
system-level support. And for years, that simple statement has hid
the tremendous complexity of actually providing those services."
When it comes to frameworks, the familiar story of the elephant and
the six blind philosophers seems to apply. As each philoso pher
encountered a separate part of the elephant, each pronounced his
considered, but flawed judgement. One blind philosopher felt a leg
and thought it a tree. Another felt the tail and thought he held a
rope. Another felt the elephant's flank and thought he stood before
a wall. We're supposed to learn about snap judgements from this
alle gory, but its author might well have been describing design
automation frameworks. For in the reality of today's product
development requirements, a framework must be many things to many
people. xiv CAD Frameworks: Integration Technology for CAD As the
authors of this book note, framework design is an optimi zation
problem. Somehow, it has to be both a superior rope for one and a
tremendous tree for another. Somehow it needs to provide a standard
environment for exploiting the full potential of computer-aided
engineering tools. And, somehow, it has to make real such
abstractions as interoperability and interchangeability. For years,
we've talked about a framework as something that provides
application-oriented services, just as an operating system provides
system-level support. And for years, that simple statement has hid
the tremendous complexity of actually providing those services.
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