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SWE 3313 Exam 1 Part 1

what a program needs to do

Functional Requirements

The manner in which the functional requirements need to be achieved
- Real-time requirements (timing)

- Performance requirements (quality)

- Modifiability requirements

- Security requirements

- Usability requirements

Nonfunctional requirements

Statements that constrain the ways in which the software can be designed
- User interface

- Platforms

- Schedule requirements

Design constraints

The steps and thoughts related to design decisions
- Programming language

- Algorithms

Design Decisions

consistent names, capitalization, and programming conventions; know thy standard library; test and review code

Implementations

done by clients, or somebody on their behalf, to make sure the program runs as specified. If this testing fails, the client can reject the program

Acceptance testing

determine whether the developers are building the correct system for the client, and verification tests determine if the system build is correct

Verification & Validation test

testing a system with no prior knowledge of its internal workings; identify how the system responds to expected and unexpected user actions, its response time, usability issues and reliability issues

Black Box Testing

tests the internal logic of the software application. It uses knowledge about how the application works and its programming code to test for any errors

White box testing

more functionalities, features, interfaces and linkages to other components, users, and data

Breadth of complexity

more linkages and connections, data sharing among functionalities and logic, control passing among functionalities, nest loops among logic, and multiple hierarchical levels among functions

Depth of complexity

4 Activities for attacking complex problems

1. Decomposition
2. Modularization

3. Separation of concerns

4. Incremental iterations

process of breaking down complex problems into smaller, more manageable parts

Decomposition

process of separating the functionality of a program into independent, interchangeable modules, such that each contains everything necessary to execute only one aspect of the desired functionality

Modularization

Continuous Integration/Continuous Deployment or CI/CD

1. continuously integrating the completed functionality
2. delivering that feature to the users

3. having the users deploying that functionalities

with multiple developers everyone has different experience; a common programming language, development tools, database, network, middleware, etc. need to be decided

Technology and Tool Considerations

1. Effort Estimation and Schedule
- cannot be too optimistic or aggressive

2. Assignment of the most effective and properly skilled people for the right tasks

Nontechnical Considerations of Development and Support

[n*(n-1)]/2

Number of communication Paths Formula

scope (meet requirements/specifications), schedule (delivered on time within budget), and quality (meet/exceed set quality standards)

Iron Triangle of Project Management

planning, organizing, monitoring, and adjusting

Four phases of project management (POMA)

- understand the requirements of the project
- perform estimation of work effort, schedule and needed resources

- Establish measurable goals

- Identify and analyze project risks

Planning

part of the planning process; three components: risk identification, prioritization, and mitigation

Risk Management

Risk matrix where likelihood is the vertical axis and impact is the horizontal axis

Risk Prioritization method

- Avoidance: costs of mitigating risks are more than the benefits
- Acceptance: sufficiently low estimated field failure rate

- Transfer: allocating a portion of risk to a third party

- Monitoring: identifying any changes that can affect the impact of the risk.

Risk Mitigation approaches

design organization structure, human resource hiring, education and training, mechanism for track/monitoring the project, risk tracking, project goals

Organizing

regular tracking to ensure that it is headed in the right direction
- Collection of project information (what and how)

- Analysis and evaluation of collected information

- Presentation and communication of project status

Monitoring

used to spot changes in the project environment so that you can plan and make adjustments accordingly; comparing costs from one month to another or comparingestimates with actuals over several weeks or months

Trend Analysis

technique that involves examining the series of input variables in relations to the corresponding output results

Regression Analysis

if the monitoring process indicates any need for adjustment, then the project management team must take timely actions
- Main areas: resources, schedule, and project content

Adjusting

(POma) resources, times, human skills (knowledge/experience), and cost

Project Effort Estimation

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