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1 CS 501 Spring 2008 CS 501: Software Engineering Lecture 10 Requirements 3

1 CS 501 Spring 2008 CS 501: Software Engineering Lecture 10 Requirements 3

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1 CS 501 Spring 2008

CS 501: Software Engineering

Lecture 10

Requirements 3

2 CS 501 Spring 2008

Course Administration

Feasibility Study

Everybody should have receive comments.

Teaching Assistants have been assigned.

Remember to send your weekly reports.

Quiz 1

Uncollected answer books are at the reception at 301 College Avenue.

3 CS 501 Spring 2008

Course Administration

Assignment 2, First Milestone, March 3-6

Read information on the Assignments Web page

Reserve time for your presentation. See the home page of the Web site.

i Client must be present

ii Not all team members must be present, but each team member must make a presentation at least once

during the semester

iii Try to find a time when the TA can be present

4 CS 501 Spring 2008

Course Administration

Assignment 2, First Milestone, March 3-6

• One third of the total work from the feasibility study.

• If you are following an iterative process, this is a major milestone when you can report visible progress to your client. Typically, this will include a first set of requirements, a provisional design and a prototype that can be used to demonstrate the functionality of the system, including user interface design.

• If you are following a modified waterfall process, this progress report should include completion of the requirements phase and perhaps the first steps in the design.

5 CS 501 Spring 2008

Software Development Principles and Practices

Software development

Software development is a craft. Software developers have a variety of tools that can be applied in different situations.

Part of the art of software development is to select the appropriate tool for a given implementation

6 CS 501 Spring 2008

Modeling Techniques for Requirements Analysis and Definition

The craft of requirements analysis and specification is to select the appropriate tool for the particular task.

• A variety of tools and techniques.

• Many are familiar from other courses.

• There is no correct technique that fits all situations.

As you build understanding of the requirements through scenarios and use cases, use modeling tools to specify requirements. The models provide a bridge between the client's understanding and the developers.

7 CS 501 Spring 2008

Decision Table: Bad Example

University Admission Decision

Note that the rules are too vague.

High SAT T F F F F F

High grades - T F F F F

Sports - - T T F F

Recommendations - - T F T F

Reject X X X

Accept X X X

8 CS 501 Spring 2008

Decision Table: Good Example

University Admission Decision

Note that the rules are now specific and testable.

SAT > S T F F F F F

GPA > G - T F F F F

Athletics code = - - T T F F

Recommendations > A- - - T F T F

Send rejection letter X X X

Send acceptance letter X X X

9 CS 501 Spring 2008

Data-Flow Models

External entities

Processing steps

Data stores or sources

Data flows

An informal modeling technique to show the flow of data through a system.

10 CS 501 Spring 2008

Data-Flow Example: University Admissions (first try)

Applicant

Applicationform Receive

application

Completedapplication

Evaluate

Rejection

Acceptance

Shows the flow, but where is the data stored?

11 CS 501 Spring 2008

Data-Flow Example: Assemble Application Stage

Applicant

Applicationform

Receive

Completedapplication

Supportinginformation

Pendingdatabase

Acknowledgment

Beginevaluation

Applicantdatabase

Evaluationrequest

AND

AND

Acknowledgment

Does this model cover all applications? Are there special cases?

12 CS 501 Spring 2008

Data-Flow Example:Process Completed Application Stage

Rejection

Evaluation

Applicantdatabase

Evaluationrequest Acceptance Financial

aid

Offer

Specialrequest

The data-flow diagram will need specification of the decision-making process.

13 CS 501 Spring 2008

Procedural Models: Flowchart

Operation

Decision

Manual operation

Report

An informal modeling technique to show the decisions and paths that data takes through a system.

14 CS 501 Spring 2008

Flowchart: University Admissions

Form received New?

Database record

T

Notify student

F Update database

Complete?

Notify student

T

FEvaluate

15 CS 501 Spring 2008

Procedural Models: Pseudo-code

Example: Check project plan

check_plan (report)

if report (date_time) > due_date_time then error (too_late) if report (client) = none then error (no_client) if report (team) < min_team or > max_team then error (bad_team) if error() = none then comments = read_report (report) return (comments (text), comments (grade)) else return error()

An informal modeling technique to show the logic behind part of a system.

16 CS 501 Spring 2008

Transition Diagrams

A system is modeled as a set of states, Si

A transition is a change from one state to another.

The occurrence of a condition, Ci, causes the transition from one state to another

Transition function:

f (Si, Cj) = Sk

Example S1 S2

S30

0

0

1

11

17 CS 501 Spring 2008

Transition Diagram for CS 501 Web Site

home

syllabus projects booksassign-mentsquizzes integrity about

slides surveysconcepts exam-ples

18 CS 501 Spring 2008

Therapy Control Consol: Finite State Machine

Example: Radiation Therapy Control Console

You are developing requirements for the operator's control console. In a client interview, the client describes the dangers inherent in using the machine.

The operator must follow a strict procedure before the machine is ready to run.

You use a finite state machine to specify the procedures. This shows the client that you understand the requirements and specifies the procedures for the developers.

19 CS 501 Spring 2008

Therapy Control Consol: Scenario

"The set up is carried out before the patient is made ready. The operator selects the patient information from a database. This provides a list of radiation fields that are approved for this patient. The operator selects the first field. This completes the set up.

"The patient is now made ready. The lock is taken off the machine and the doses with this field are applied. The operator then returns to the field selection and chooses another field."

20 CS 501 Spring 2008

State Transition Diagram

Patients Fields Setup ReadyBeam

on

Enter Enter Start

Stop

Select field

Select patient(lock on)

(lock off)

Discuss each state and transition with the client.

21 CS 501 Spring 2008

Therapy Control Consol: State Transition Table

SelectPatient

SelectField

Enter lock off Start Stop lock on

Patients

Fields

Setup

Ready

Beamon

Fields

Fields

Fields

Patients

Patients

Patients

Setup

Setup

Setup

Ready

Beamon

Ready

22 CS 501 Spring 2008

Entity-Relation Model

A requirements and design methodology for relational databases

• A database of entities and relations

• Tools for displaying and manipulating entity-relation diagrams

• Tools for manipulating the database (e.g., as input to database design)

Warning: There is much confusion about definitions and notation

23 CS 501 Spring 2008

Entity-Relation Diagram

An entity

A relation between entities

An entity or relation attribute

An inheritance relation

24 CS 501 Spring 2008

Example: CS 501 Project

Student

CS501 Student

Major

Project

5 to 7

1

Member of

Client team member

Client1:n

Tech contact

0:n0:1

0:1

25 CS 501 Spring 2008

Example: Schema for Web Data

CS 501 Spring 2005

26 CS 501 Spring 2008

Data Dictionaries

A data dictionary is a list of names used by the system

• Name (e.g., "start_date")

• Brief definition (e.g., what is "date")

• What is it? (e.g., integer, relation)

• Where is it used (e.g., source, used by, etc.)

• May be combined with a glossary

As the system is implemented, the data dictionary in the requirements is input to the system data dictionary, which is a formal part of the system specification.

27 CS 501 Spring 2008

Petri Nets

A Petri Net models parallelism

A

S1

Sm

S

S

A

Event 1

Event n

Event

A

Event 1

Event n

..

f(A; E) S

f(A; E1,..,En) S

f(A; E1,..,En) S1,..,Sm

28 CS 501 Spring 2008

Prototyping Requirements

Rapid prototyping is the most comprehensive of all modeling methods

A method for specifying requirements by building a system that demonstrates the functionality of key parts of the required system

Particularly valuable for user interfaces

29 CS 501 Spring 2008

A Note on Object Models

This course teaches object models as a tool for design.

Some people recommend object models for requirements definition, but it is difficult to use them without constraining the system design.

Flow charts and finite state machines are supported by UML as design models, but can also be used for requirements.

*