Peter Coad

Peter Coad (born December 30, 1953[1][2]) is a software entrepreneur and author of books on programming. He is notable for his role in defining what have come to be known as the UML colors,[3] a color-coded notation chiefly useful for simplifying one's understanding of a design or model.

Biography

Coad received a Bachelor of Science with Honors in Electrical Engineering from OSU (Stillwater) in 1977[4] and a Master of Science in Computer Science from USC in 1981.[4]

In 1986, Peter Coad founded Object International, a software consulting firm where he served as President.

During the 1990s Coad co-authored six books on the analysis, design, and programming of object-oriented software. During this time Coad became famous through his work on the Coad/Yourdon method for Object-oriented analysis (OOA) which he had developed together with Edward Yourdon. He is considered a supporter of the lightweight methodology called Feature Driven Development (FDD), which was developed primarily by co-author Jeff De Luca.

In 1999, Coad was one of the founders of the software company TogetherSoft, where he served as Chairman, CEO, and President.

From about 2000 to 2004 Coad was Editor-in-Chief of the Coad Series[5] of books from Prentice Hall. This series of books were in the field of software development.

Coad became senior vice president and chief strategist of Borland Software Corp. when Borland bought TogetherSoft in January 2003. Coad left Borland before the end of 2003 and turned his attention to interests outside of the software development field, especially simplified teaching techniques for learning to read The Bible in its original languages.

Coad is co-founder of TheBible.org, a nonprofit developer of apps and website for Scripture readers, where he serves as president, 2004-present.[6]

Publications

Books
  • Java Modeling In Color With UML, Peter Coad, Eric Lefebvre, and Jeff De Luca, June 1999, ISBN 0-13-011510-X
  • Java Design: Building Better Apps and Applets (2nd Edition), Peter Coad, Mark Mayfield, and Jon Kern, 1998, ISBN 0-13-911181-6
  • Object Models: Strategies, Patterns, and Applications, (2nd Edition) Peter Coad, Mark Mayfield, and David North, 1996, ISBN 0-13-840117-9
  • Object-Oriented Programming, Peter Coad and Jill Nicola, 1993, pages 582, ISBN 0-13-032616-X
  • Object Oriented Design, Peter Coad and Ed Yourdon, 1991, ISBN 0-13-630070-7
  • Object Oriented Analysis (2nd Edition), Peter Coad and Ed Yourdon, 1990, pages 233, ISBN 0-13-629981-4
Selected Papers
  • Amplified Learning pdf A practical guide to applying the "seven intelligences" theory, so that your presentations can be more engaging, effective, and fun.
gollark: The API is a thin layer over the database which has to accursedly convert things to ints or strings all the time because my IDs are 64-bit integers and JS only allows 53 bit ones because of course it does.
gollark: Or I have many, many screenshots.
gollark: Or you can access a demo version!
gollark: It is not public because oh apioforms the *code quality*, but I can send you a TAR of it.
gollark: Minoteaur 7 is where it's at.

References

  1. DAAD Project “Joint Course on Software Engineering”Topic 13 Object-oriented Analysis
  2. Family Tree MakerDescendants of James Collins
  3. Peter Coad, Java Design specifies a consistent notation for denoting four fundamental categories: 1-pink) time, 2-light green) person, place or thing, 3-yellow) role, or 4-pale blue) commentary/description.
  4. JAOO 1999 conference Speakers bio
  5. InformIT: The Coad Series
  6. "TheBible.org Parallel Bible+ - Android Apps on Google Play". play.google.com. Retrieved 2016-04-05.
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