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Discovering Requirements: How to Specify Products and Services - ISBN 9780470712405

Discovering Requirements: How to Specify Products and Services

ISBN 9780470712405

Autor: Ian F. Alexander, Ljerka Beus–Dukic

Wydawca: Wiley

Dostępność: 3-6 tygodni

Cena: 236,25 zł

Przed złożeniem zamówienia prosimy o kontakt mailowy celem potwierdzenia ceny.


ISBN13:      

9780470712405

ISBN10:      

0470712406

Autor:      

Ian F. Alexander, Ljerka Beus–Dukic

Oprawa:      

Paperback

Rok Wydania:      

2009-02-27

Ilość stron:      

476

Wymiary:      

235x191

Tematy:      

UP

“This book is not only of practical value. It’s also a lot of fun to read.” Michael Jackson, The Open University.
Do you need to know how to create good requirements?
Discovering Requirements offers a set of simple, robust, and effective cognitive tools for building requirements. Using worked examples throughout the text, it shows you how to develop an understanding of any problem, leading to questions such as:
What are you trying to achieve?
Who is involved, and how?
What do those people want? Do they agree?
How do you envisage this working?
What could go wrong?
Why are you making these decisions? What are you assuming?
The established author team of Ian Alexander and Ljerka Beus–Dukic answer these and related questions, using a set of complementary techniques, including stakeholder analysis, goal modelling, context modelling, storytelling and scenario modelling, identifying risks and threats, describing rationales, defining terms in a project dictionary, and prioritizing.
This easy to read guide is full of carefully–checked tips and tricks. Illustrated with worked examples, checklists, summaries, keywords and exercises, this book will encourage you to move closer to the real problems you’re trying to solve. Guest boxes from other experts give you additional hints for your projects.
Invaluable for anyone specifying requirements including IT practitioners, engineers, developers, business analysts, test engineers, configuration managers, quality engineers and project managers.
A practical sourcebook for lecturers as well as students studying software engineering who want to learn about requirements work in industry.
Once you’ve read this book you will be ready to create good requirements!

Spis treści:
Dedication.
Acknowledgements.
Foreword.
PART I: DISCOVERING REQUIREMENT ELEMENTS.
1. Introduction.
1.1 Summary.
1.2 Why You Should Read This Book.
1.3 Simple but Not Easy.
1.4 Discovered, not Found.
1.5 A Softer Process, at First.
1.6 More than a List of ’The System Shalls’.
1.7 A Minimum of Process: the Discovery Cycle.
1.8 Structure of this Book.
1.9 Further Reading.
2. Stakeholders.
2.1 Summary.
2.2 Discovering Stakeholders.
2.3 Identifying Stakeholders.
2.4 Managing Your Stakeholders.
2.5 Validating Your List of Stakeholders.
2.6 The Bare Minimum of Stakeholder Analysis.
2.7 Next Steps: Requirements from Stakeholders.
2.8 Exercises.
2.9 Further Reading.
3. Goals.
3.1 Summary.
3.2 Discovering Goals.
3.3 Documenting Goals.
3.4 Validating Goals.
3.5 The Bare Minimum of Goals.
3.6 Next Steps.
3.7 Exercises.
3.8 Further Reading.
4. Context, Interfaces, Scope.
4.1 Summary.
4.2 Introduction.
4.3 A ‘Soft Systems’ Approach for Ill–Defined Boundaries.
4.4 Switching to a ‘Hard Systems’ Approach for Known Events.
4.5 The Bare Minimum of Context.
4.6 Next Steps.
4.7 Exercises.
4.8 Further Reading.
5. Scenarios.
5.1 Summary.
5.2 Discovering Scenarios.
5.3 Documenting Scenarios.
5.4 Validating Scenarios.
5.5 The Bare Minimum of Scenarios.
5.6 Next Steps.
5.7 Exercises.
5.8 Further Reading.
6. Qualities & Constraints.
6.1 Summary.
6.2 What are Qualities and Constraints?
6.3 Discovering Qualities and Constraints.
6.4 Documenting Qualities and Constraints.
6.5 Validating Qualities and Constraints.
6.6 The Bare Minimum of Qualities and Constraints.
6.7 Next Steps.
6.8 Exercises.
6.9 Further Reading.
7. Rationale and Assumptions.
7.1 Summary.
7.2 The Value of Rationale.
7.3 Discovering Rationale and Assumptions.
7.4 Documenting Rationale.
7.5 Validating Rationale and Assumptions.
7.6 The Bare Minimu m of Rationale and Assumptions.
7.7 Next Steps.
7.8 Exercises.
7.9 Further Reading.
8. Definitions.
8.1 Summary.
8.2 Discovering Definitions.
8.3 The Bare Minimum of Definitions.
8.4 Next Steps.
8.5 Exercises.
8.6 Further Reading.
9. Measurements.
9.1 Summary.
9.2 Discovering and Documenting Acceptance Criteria.
9.3 Validating Acceptance Criteria.
9.4 Measuring Quality of Service (Qos).
9.5 Validating Qos Measures.
9.6 The Bare Minimum of Measurement.
9.7 Next Steps.
9.8 Exercises.
9.9 Further Reading.
10. Priorities.
10.1 Summary.
10.2 Two Kinds of Priority.
10.3 Input Priority.
10.4 Output Priority.
10.5 The Bare Minimum of Priorities.
10.6 Next Steps.
10.7 Exercises.
10.8 Further Reading.
PART II: DISCOVERY CONTEXTS.
11. Requirements from Individuals.
11.1 Summary.
11.2 Introduction.
11.3 Interviews.
11.4 Observation and ‘Apprenticeship’.
11.5 The Bare Minimum from Individuals.
11.6 Exercises.
11.7 Further Reading.
12. Requirements from Groups.
12.1 Summary.
12.2 The Goal of Group Work.
12.3 Workshops.
12.4 Group Media.
12.5 The Bare Minimum from Groups.
12.6 Next Steps.
12.7 Exercises.
12.8 Further Reading.
13. Requirements from Things.
13.1 Summary.
13.2 Requirements Prototyping.
13.3 Reverse Engineering.
13.4 Requirements Reuse.
13.5 Validating Requirements from Things.
13.6 The Bare Minimum from Things.
13.7 Exercises.
13.8 Further Reading.
14. Trade–Offs.
14.1 Summary.
14.2 Optioneering: The Engineering of Trade–Offs.
14.3 Validating your Trade–offs.
14.4 The Bare Minimum of Trade–offs.
14.5 Next Steps.
14.6 Exercises.
14.7 Further Reading.
15. Putting it all Together.
15.1 Summary.
15.2 After Discovery.
15.3 The Right Process for your Project.
15.4 Organis ing the Requirements Specification.
15.5 The Bare Minimum of Putting it all Together.
15.6 Further Reading.
Appendix A.
Appendix B.
Appendix C.
Appendix D.
Bibliography.
Glossary.
Abstracts.

Okładka tylna:
“This book is not only of practical value. It’s also a lot of fun to read.” Michael Jackson, The Open University.
Do you need to know how to create good requirements?
Discovering Requirements offers a set of simple, robust, and effective cognitive tools for building requirements. Using worked examples throughout the text, it shows you how to develop an understanding of any problem, leading to questions such as:
What are you trying to achieve?
Who is involved, and how?
What do those people want? Do they agree?
How do you envisage this working?
What could go wrong?
Why are you making these decisions? What are you assuming?
The established author team of Ian Alexander and Ljerka Beus–Dukic answer these and related questions, using a set of complementary techniques, including stakeholder analysis, goal modelling, context modelling, storytelling and scenario modelling, identifying risks and threats, describing rationales, defining terms in a project dictionary, and prioritizing.
This easy to read guide is full of carefully–checked tips and tricks. Illustrated with worked examples, checklists, summaries, keywords and exercises, this book will encourage you to move closer to the real problems you’re trying to solve. Guest boxes from other experts give you additional hints for your projects.
Invaluable for anyone specifying requirements including IT practitioners, engineers, developers, business analysts, test engineers, configuration managers, quality engineers and project managers.
A practical sourcebook for lecturers as well as students studying software engineering who want to learn about requirements wor

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