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McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 7 CASE Tools and Joint and Rapid Application Development.

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Presentation on theme: "McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 7 CASE Tools and Joint and Rapid Application Development."— Presentation transcript:

1 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 7 CASE Tools and Joint and Rapid Application Development

2 7-2 Learning Objectives Understand the history and evolution of CASE tools Understand the motivations to adopt CASE in the modern organization Understand the various levels of CASE tool integration

3 7-3 Learning Objectives Appreciate the advantages and disadvantages associated with CASE tool adoption and use Learn the components, relationships, and functions contained in a modern CASE tool Understand the processes associated with JAD

4 7-4 Learning Objectives Learn the various participant roles associated with a JAD session Understand the relationship between the RAD approach and the traditional SDLC

5 7-5IntroductionIntroduction In an effort to improve the overall efficiency and effectiveness of the development activities, IS professionals have developed several tools and techniques to automate certain activities. This chapter focuses on two such developments: (1) CASE tools and (2) RAD techniques.

6 7-6 CASE Tools Computer-Aided Software Engineering Software development is extremely labor intensive Tools that aid software engineer in maintaining and developing software

7 7-7 Figure 7-1. Recent Evolution of the Modern CASE Tool

8 7-8 Table 7-1. Development Costs for Several Modern Software Applications

9 7-9 CASE Tools Support each phase of the SDLC Upper CASE –support the early phases of the life cycle Lower CASE –support the implementation phases of the life cycle Life-cycle-spanning CASE –support the entire SDLC (Integrated CASE)

10 7-10 Table 7-2. Common Objectives for CASE Tool Adoption

11 7-11 Figure 7-2. Oracle Designer Main Menu

12 7-12 CASE Tools Good News –Productivity –Time –Quality –Documentation –Standards enforcement

13 7-13 CASE Tools Bad News –Expensive –ROI is longer than the organization would prefer –Lack of organizational policies and standards

14 7-14 Table 7-3. Potential CASE Tool Cost Categories

15 7-15 Table 7-4. Sample CASE Tool Adoption Budget

16 7-16 Table 7-5. The Good News and the Bad News About CASE Tool Adoption

17 7-17 Components and Functions Central Repository –Central storage and retrieval location for all related information –Allows portions of prior systems to be reused in new applications

18 7-18 Figure 7-3. Component Relationships in Modern I-CASE Tools

19 7-19 Figure 7-4. Typical Elements Stored in CASE Tool Central Repository

20 7-20 Components and Functions Modeling and Diagramming Tools –Process Modeling Tools –Function Hierarchy Diagramming Tools –Server Modeling Diagramming Tools

21 7-21 Figure 7-5. Case Tool Process Modeler (Oracle Designer)

22 7-22 Figure 7-6. CASE Tool Server Model Diagram (Oracle Designer)

23 7-23 Figure 7-7. Typical Data Flow Diagramming Tool (TurboCASE)

24 7-24 Figure 7-8. CASE Tool Entity-Relationship Modeler (Oracle Designer)

25 7-25 Components and Functions Prototyping and Transformation Tools –Application Transformers –Database Transformers –Form and Report Generators

26 7-26 Components and Functions Documentation Generators –Generate phase-specific documentation –Create a set of master templates to be used for each phase of the life cycle

27 7-27 Components and Functions Code Generators –Produce high-level source code from various components in the central repository –Reverse engineering: generate design specification and models from existing program –Reengineering functions: provide tools to analyze the logic of the program

28 7-28 Figure 7-9. Sample Screen From Classmapper Reverse Engineering Tool

29 7-29 Figure 7-10. UNIX-based Application Before Reverse Engineering

30 7-30 Figure 7-11. Windows Application After Reverse Engineering

31 7-31 Figure 7-12. Sample Screen From Imagix Reengineering Tool

32 7-32 Components and Functions The concept of Integration –Data Integration –Control Integration –Presentation Integration

33 7-33 Figure 7-13. Stages of CASE Tool Integration

34 7-34 The Future of CASE New and more powerful development tools Artificial Intelligence (AI) Expert Systems Case-based reasoning

35 7-35 Joint Application Design Bring together the users, managers, and technical personnel to conduct a series of structured intensive information-gathering workshops Enhance the development of a shared understanding among the system stakeholders

36 7-36 JAD Session Usually held at a location other than the typical workplace Avoid distracting environment Detailed agenda is a necessity

37 7-37 Figure 7-14. Examples of Large-Scale JAD Environments

38 7-38 JAD Team JAD Facilitator Management Sponsor Information Specialists Scribe End Users

39 7-39 JAD Session Tasks and Objectives Identify all stakeholders and clarify executive goal. Scope out general requirements from each of the users' perspectives. Reconcile and then summarize each user's view of the product with the executive goal. Define interaction of the product with users, other products or systems, and the organization. Concur on business justification, time box, and cost box for project.

40 7-40 JAD Session Tasks and Objectives Define ways in which users will interact with or use the new product. –Collect samples of desired inputs and outputs from users. –Stick to business processes first, then drill down for data needed and known. Prioritize user interaction scenarios by collective user preference and risk. Validate and review the user interaction scenarios. Organize the interactions scenarios, constraints, assumptions, and other requirements into a rigorous Software Requirements Specification.

41 7-41 JAD Advantages Create a sense of involvement Allow for the simultaneous gathering and consolidating of information Resolve discrepancies at early stage

42 7-42 JAD Disadvantages Extreme commitment of a large number of employees Might still exclude some important personnel Lack of diplomacy and communication skills among employees

43 7-43 Rapid Application Development A series of techniques to compress the analysis, design, build, and test phases into a series of short, iterative development cycles

44 7-44 Application Development with RAD Approach Use of small, well-trained development teams Construction and review of iterative, evolutionary prototypes Reliance on integrated development tools that support modeling, prototyping, and component re- usability (CASE) Construction and maintenance of a central repository Heavy reliance on interactive requirements and design workshops (JAD) Adherence to rigid limits on development time frames

45 7-45 Figure 7-15. Differences Between Traditional Lifecycle and RAD Approach

46 7-46 Figure 7-16. Comparison of Phases Between SDLC and RAD

47 7-47 RAD Activities Process Model Data Model Parallel Development

48 7-48 Table 7-8. Activities and Deliverables in RAD Phases

49 7-49 Table 7-9. Situational Characteristics to Consider When Adopting RAD

50 7-50 Table 7-10. Comparison of the Advantages and Disadvantages Associated with the RAD Approach

51 7-51 Figure 7-17. Comparison of Effort and Time Between SDLC and RAD

52 7-52 Chapter Summary Regardless of the various approaches (CASE, JAD, RAD), the fundamental tenets of structured problem solving as followed by SDLC still apply and must be adhered to. Despite the automation available to us, the analyst is still at the center of the process.

53 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 7 End of Chapter


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