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Arcitura Education Exam S90.03 Topic 4 Question 106 Discussion

Actual exam question for Arcitura Education's S90.03 exam
Question #: 106
Topic #: 4
[All S90.03 Questions]

The Service Loose Coupling principle advocates which of the following coupling types? Select the correct answer.

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Suggested Answer: C

Contribute your Thoughts:

Deandrea
20 days ago
B) Consumer-to-Contract, no doubt. Loose coupling is all about decoupling the consumer from the implementation. Wait, is that the same as the contract? *scratches head*
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Bernadine
21 days ago
Hold on, is this a trick question? Maybe the answer is E) All of the Above, and the real question is 'Which of these are NOT principles of loose coupling?'
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Annabelle
3 days ago
B) Consumer-to-Contract
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Lawrence
4 days ago
A) Contract-to-Implementation
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Alyce
9 days ago
A) Contract-to-Implementation
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Erick
30 days ago
I think the correct answer is D) None of the above because loose coupling is about minimizing dependencies.
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Jessenia
1 months ago
This question is making my brain hurt. I'll just go with the flow and pick C) Logic-to-Contract. Seems legit.
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Vilma
7 days ago
I'm going with B) Consumer-to-Contract.
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Flo
19 days ago
I think the answer is A) Contract-to-Implementation.
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Domitila
1 months ago
I'm not sure, but I think it might be C) Logic-to-Contract.
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Ben
2 months ago
A) Contract-to-Implementation? Isn't that the opposite of loose coupling? I'm going with B).
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Emelda
20 days ago
Yeah, I agree. Contract-to-Implementation seems too tightly coupled.
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Elliot
1 months ago
I think B) Consumer-to-Contract makes more sense for loose coupling.
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Alease
2 months ago
I disagree, I believe the answer is B) Consumer-to-Contract.
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Ardella
2 months ago
I think the answer is A) Contract-to-Implementation.
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Yolande
2 months ago
Hmm, I'm not sure. D) None of the above sounds like a trap answer. Better double-check my notes.
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Jamal
1 months ago
Yeah, D) None of the above does seem like a tricky choice.
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Alecia
1 months ago
A) Contract-to-Implementation is the correct answer.
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Willodean
2 months ago
I think the answer is B) Consumer-to-Contract. That's what loose coupling is all about, right?
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Jolene
1 months ago
I believe it's C) Logic-to-Contract. That's how the service can be decoupled from the implementation details.
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Brandon
1 months ago
Actually, I think it's A) Contract-to-Implementation. That's the type of coupling that allows for flexibility.
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Sabra
1 months ago
I agree, loose coupling is about the consumer being independent of the contract.
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