> Thank you, Colin, for 'stoling', it is very much expected. Don't even know what to say to that, it was just a quote.
> > As of 'Anyhow I certainly think a business service should define > the context for one or more domain models, or thats the way I see > things at least' would say that I understand in the opposire order. > That is, the business model separated per domain, defines the > context where the service operates (accessed and executed). An > execution context is the external constraint to the serivce and, > respectively, to the domain dirven object design within the service > body (realisation). Yeah I get what you are saying now (having read the other discussion as well) and that makes perfect sense. - Colin
