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Published bySydnie Featherston Modified over 9 years ago
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Prescriptive Software Models
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Recall Boehm’s paper Why did they “invent” the waterfall model? – Distinction between programmer and user – Increased application, higher risks – Large systems: development is a group activity Bring order to chaos: – Increased system and company size requires a design phase – Different end users demands a requirements phase – Need for quality demands an orderly approach
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Prescriptive models Several variants of the waterfall model exist – All depend on stable requirements – All focus on deliverables and documentation These models are still popular today – For contracts that require documentation (DoD, government, etc) – For large systems with many developers – But they frequently “fail” What are the benefits and drawbacks of each?
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Types of Prescriptive Models Waterfall
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Types of Prescriptive Models Incremental
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Types of Prescriptive Models Rapid Application Development (RAD)
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Types of Prescriptive Models Evolutionary models: spiral
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Types of Prescriptive Models Prototyping
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Types of Prescriptive Models Unified Process Model
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In-class exercise Which prescriptive model would you use to: – Developing software to automatically drive racecars through a track without crashing. This has never been attempted before under software control. The requirements are stable. – Developing software to track the financial bailout. The software requirements are very clear. You need to create a system to perform 3 distinct tasks. All functions will interface with each other and the same underlying database.
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