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CIS 339 Innovative Educator/cis339.com

CIS 339 Innovative Educator/cis339.com

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Page 1: CIS 339 Innovative Educator/cis339.com

CIS 339 Innovative Educator/cis339.com

Page 2: CIS 339 Innovative Educator/cis339.com

CIS 339 Entire Course (UOP)For more course tutorials visit

www.cis339.com

CIS 339iLab 1 System RequirementsCIS 339 iLab 2 of 7CIS 339iLab 3 - Structural Modeling - Class Diagram and CRCsCIS 339iLab 4 - Sequence, Communication, and State DiagramsCIS 339iLab 5 - Package DiagramsCIS 339iLab 6 - CRCs, Contracts, and Method SpecificationsCIS 339iLab 7 - Object-Oriented Application Coding 

CIS 339 Innovative Educator

Page 3: CIS 339 Innovative Educator/cis339.com

CIS 339 iLab 1 System Requirements (Devry)For more course tutorials visit

www.cis339.com L A B O V E R V I E W Scenario and SummaryYou have been hired by the School of Prosperity (SoP) as a software architect to help the

school plan, design, and implement a new online system called the Student Records System (SRS).

The Student Records System (SRS), described in the SRS Preliminary Planning Overview document, is the 7-week-long project that you will work on throughout this course. You will be developing UML models and documents for the planning, design, and implementation phases of SRS development.

In each week, you will be provided with the information you need to continue to develop your analysis and design UML models and documents for this project.

In this very first week, you will develop the System Request document that articulates the business needs and values of the SRS. The Sop school is excited about this project and allowed you to ask them five questions to clarify project issues for you about the SRS project. You are to include these five questions in your submitted System Request.

CIS 339 Innovative Educator

Page 4: CIS 339 Innovative Educator/cis339.com

CIS 339 iLab 2 of 7 (Devry)For more course tutorials visit

www.cis339.com Use Case Diagram and Use Case DescriptionWork has already started on the planning phase of the Student Record System (SRS)

for the School of Prosperity (SoP) and everyone is excited about this new system.As the software architect of this project, you met with many users and stakeholders of

the old system to determine the requirements of the new Internet-accessible SRS software system. Your meetings and requirement-gathering efforts resulted in an SRS Requirement Definition document that summarizes all of the requirements of the project.

One of your development team members was excited about this project and wanted to start working on it immediately.

CIS 339 Innovative Educator

Page 5: CIS 339 Innovative Educator/cis339.com

CIS 339 iLab 3 - Structural Modeling - Class Diagram and CRCs (Devry)For more course tutorials visit

www.cis339.com As the software architect for the SRS system, you are making good progress in your

work. After finishing the Functional Modeling (activity diagram, use case diagram, and use case descriptions) of the SRS system, you are now ready to move on to its Structural Modeling.

In this week, you will use the models of your Functional Modeling to determine and design your class diagram and complete a CRC card for each class. The Structural Modeling is very critical for the success of your project since it is the backbone upon which the entire project is built, so take the time to design and refine your class diagram and its corresponding CRC cards.

CIS 339 Innovative Educator

Page 6: CIS 339 Innovative Educator/cis339.com

CIS 339 iLab 4 - Sequence, Communication, and State Diagrams (Devry)For more course tutorials visit

www.cis339.com In this week, you will use your functional and structural models as the basis for your

behavioral models that need to be developed for the SRS system. Specifically, your deliverables for this week are designed to develop these two behavioral diagrams for the Register a Student for Classes use case.

Sequence diagram Communication diagramIn addition, you will also need to create a state machine diagram for the Registration

class (the class that maintains the registration of a student in a class).These behavioral model and diagrams are major milestones in your architectural and

design work. They give you your first opportunity to verify that your use case (in this case, Register a Student for Classes) could actually be implemented using the objects of your class diagram design.

CIS 339 Innovative Educator

Page 7: CIS 339 Innovative Educator/cis339.com

CIS 339 iLab 5 - Package Diagrams (Devry)For more course tutorials visit

www.cis339.com

Your analysis phase of the SRS project went well and your team feels good about their Functional, Structural, and Behavioral models. You also discussed the result of your analysis with the School of Prosperity (SoP) administration and they seem to be in line with your analysis models.

Now is the time to start the design phase where you generate specific directions for the implementation of the system by the software development group. The first step in the design phase is to examine the SRS class diagram and to try to simplify its organization using a package diagram.

CIS 339 Innovative Educator

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CIS 339 iLab 6 - CRCs, Contracts, and Method Specifications (Devry)For more course tutorials visit

www.cis339.com The design phase of the SRS project is in full swing and every developer on the team

is assigned a group of packages to work on and to complete the design details of the classes in the package. To help speed up the design process, you—as the software architect of the project—were assigned the task of providing a samplemethod contract and a sample method specification to demonstrate to your team how these two documents are developed.

CIS 339 Innovative Educator

Page 9: CIS 339 Innovative Educator/cis339.com

CIS 339 iLab 7 - Object-Oriented Application Coding (Devry)For more course tutorials visit

www.cis339.com 

 Your demonstrations of how to create both method contract and the method

specification for the GetCourseByCourseID() method of the CourseList class were very well received by your team members. They then asked you for one final demonstration of how to implement the method specification using an object-oriented (OO) programming language and see the method actually execute.

You realize that it is easy to implement the method specification in an OO programming language, but it is hard to test it because the rest of the application is not developed yet. You decided, therefore, to write two pieces of code.

Code that implements the GetCourseByCourseID() method Code that implements a unit test for that method alone (outside of any other application code)

CIS 339 Innovative Educator

Page 10: CIS 339 Innovative Educator/cis339.com

CIS 339 Innovative Educator