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Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology Sriram Mohan 18.September.2008 CSSE 497 Requirements Review
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Documents this term Use cases What about those requirements you can’t do with a Use Case? Best practices Peer reviews Client Concerns Non-technical clients Long distance clients Outline
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Project plan Process definition Schedule Configuration management plan Risk assessment Problem statement Requirements document(s) Design spec Test plans What Documents do you need to produce?
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Groundwork for your project Establishes common ground for your team Living document Project Plan
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Needs Features Requirements Problem Domain Solution Domain
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Problem Statement Function Form Economy Time
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Examples: http://www.rose-hulman.edu/class/csse/csse497-498- 499/Examples/ A Good Process
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What is a Functional Requirement? Functional requirements specify particular behaviors of a system. 8
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What is a Use Case? A sequence of actions a system performs that yield and observable result of value to a particular actor Sequences of actions Performed by system of interest Observable result of value to a particular actor 9
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Benefits Easy to write and read Think from the perspective of an user Provides a clear idea of the “what” and the “how” User involvement Use cases tell a better requirement story Typically developers are encouraged and required to write use cases. Why ? 10
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Name Brief description Actors Basic flow Alternate flows Pre-conditions Post-conditions Other stakeholders System/sub-system Special requirements Use Case Template 11
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Condition: optional User: external or internal, usually singular See RFC 2116 (http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2119.txt) Shall/Will/Must: Mandatory, “definition is an absolute requirement of the specification.” Should: Recommended, “there may exist valid reasons in particular circumstances to ignore a particular item” May: Optional Action: usually singular Requirements that don’t fit use case model
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The database shall use mySQL The LEDs shall refresh at a rate of 1 Hz The interface shall conform to 802.11b standards The system should support up to 100 users The installation should take under 30 minutes Examples
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A requirements document should include: Scope Product description Business case or mission (needs, goals, and objectives) Operational concepts Interfaces Reference documents (as needed) Requirements (subdivided and with rationale) Verification method (defined with requirements) Best Practices
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Singular Necessary Attainable Complete Correct Unambiguous Verifiable Traceable A good requirement is
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Essentially About/approximately A few Quickly Slowly Average (adjective not noun or verb) Realistic Designated amount of time Will make sure Appropriate response If possible When cost-effective What is not testable?
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Peer Reviews
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In person is best When that’s not possible, telephone Last resort, email Follow up all meetings with minutes If you have to email, have someone else read it first When needing a response, include the following: “I would appreciate your feedback by 8 AM Monday. If this isn’t convenient for you, please feel free to propose a different time.” Allows you to call at noon on Monday if you don’t have any feedback. Client Concerns
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“It’s really hard to design products by focus groups. A lot of times, people don’t know what they want until you show it to them.” – BusinessWeek, May 25 1998 (Steve Jobs) Use pictures, charts, visuals Use static prototypes Make sure it’s obvious it’s a prototype Vague Requirements
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Questions?
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