Information system development process : proceedings of the IFIP WG8.1 Working Conference on Information Development Process, Como, Italy, 1-3 September, 1993 /
This volume aims to pave the way to a greater understanding of the information system development process. Traditionally, information systems have been perceived as a <Q>slice of real world history</Q>. This has led to a strong emphasis on the development of conceptual models, the requir...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor Corporativo: | |
Otros Autores: | , , |
Formato: | Electrónico Congresos, conferencias eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Amsterdam ; New York :
North-Holland,
1993.
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Colección: | IFIP transactions. Computer science and technology ;
A-30. |
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Front Cover; Information System Development Process; Copyright Page; PREFACE; PROGRAM COMMITTEE; LIST OF REFEREES; Table of Contents; PART 1: INTRODUCTION; Chapter 1. Vision Driven System Engineering; 1. INTRODUCTION; 2. WHERE DO THE GOALS COME FROM?; 3 . HOW ARE THE GOALS USED?; 4. HOW ARE THE GOALS MANAGED?; 5. CONCLUSIONS; REFERENCES; PART 2: PROCESS/PRODUCT MODELING I; Chapter 2. Customization and Evolution of Process Models in EPOS; 1. Introduction; 2. Background; 3. EPOS Survey: SPELL and Subdatabases; 4. Process Models, Consistency and Variability
- 5. Proposals for Control of PM Changes6. Conclusions and Further Work; References; Chapter 3. The Evolutionary Object Model (EOM); 1. INTRODUCTION; 2. MODELING EVOLUTION OF PRODUCT OBJECTS; 3. F3 TRACING MODEL; 4. CONCLUSION; REFERENCES; PART 3. REUSE I; Chapter 4. Mechanisms of Standardized Reusability of Objects (MCO methodology); 1. INTRODUCTION; 2. REMINDER OF THE PRINCIPAL CONCEPTS OF THE MCO MODEL; 3. MAIN CONCEPTS OF OBJECT REUSABILITY; 4. THE STANDARDIZED REUSABILITY OF OBJECTS; 5. EXAMPLE OF RESULTS OF THE STANDARDIZED REUSABILITY OF OBJECTS
- 6. USE AND IMPLEMENTATION OF THE ALGORITHM OF STANDARDIZED REUSABILITY OF THE OBJECTS7. USE OF MECHANISMS OF STANDARDIZED REUSABILITY DURING THE INTEGRATION OF NEW INSTANCES; 8. STEPS WHERE THE OBJECT REUSABILITY IS STUDIED; 9. CONCLUSION; REFERENCES; Chapter 5. Reuse of Specifications and Designs in a Development Information System; 1. Introduction; 2. Development Information System; 3. Reuse model; 4. Application Specification Session; 5. Concluding remarks and future work; Acknowledgments; References; PART 4: REQUIREMENTS ENGINEERING
- Chapter 6. Use of Domain Knowledge for Requirements Validation1. INTRODUCTION; 2. A PRELIMINARY THEORY OF DOMAIN KNOWLEDGE; 3. VALIDATION AND THE DOMAIN THEORY; 4. FUTURE WORK ON VALIDATION; 5. CONCLUSIONS; ACKNOWLEDEGEMENTS; REFERENCES; Chapter 7. Utilizing Scenarios in the Software Development Process; Abstract; 1. Introduction; 2. An Example Application; 3. A Scenario is; 4. Three Example Systems; 5. Roles of scenarios; 6. Computer-Based Support for Scenarios; 7. Summary; References; Chapter 8. Assessment and control of the requirements elicitation process in a CASE environment; Abstract
- 1. INTRODUCTION2. AN UPGRADED CASE ENVIRONMENT; 3. CALCULATION OF SPECIFIC RISKS; 4. CONCLUSIONS; REFERENCES; PART 5: METAMODELING; Chapter 9. A Meta-Model for Representing Software Specification & Design Methods; 1. INTRODUCTION; 2. REQUIREMENTS TO META MODEL; 3. META MODEL; 4. REPRESENTING METHODS BY USING META MODEL; 5. RELATED WORKS; 6. METHOD BASE SYSTEMS; 7. Conclusion; REFERENCES; Chapter 10. A Method Engineering Approach to Information Systems Development; Abstract; 1. Introduction; 2. The Framework; 3. The Decomposition Process; 4. Aspects of the Framework