Chapter 1 The Systems Development Environment
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Transcript of Chapter 1 The Systems Development Environment
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© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers Unit 11 Slide 1
Chapter 1
The Systems Development Environment
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© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers Unit 1 Slide 2
Learning Objectives1. Describe different types of information
systems. Define information systems analysis and design. Describe the different types of information systems.
2. Compare different methods to distribute information systems and data. Describe the different types of information systems. Explain the Systems Development Life Cycle
(SLDC).
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© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers Unit 1 Slide 3
Learning Objectives
3. Explain the Systems Development Life Cycle (SLDC). Describe the Information Systems Development
Life Cycle (SDLC).
5. Classify different types of software development models. Explain Rapid Application Development (RAD)
and it constituent parts: prototyping, Joint Application Design (JAD), and Computer-Aided Software Engineering (CASE) tools.
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© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers Unit 1 Slide 4
Learning Objectives
Describe the Agile Methodologies and eXtreme Programming.
Explain object-oriented analysis and design and the Rational Unified Process (RUP).
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© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers Unit 1 Slide 5
Introduction
• Information Systems Analysis and Design Complex organizational process whereby computer-based
information systems are developed and maintained
• Application Software Computer software designed to support organizational
functions or processes
• Systems Analyst Organizational role most responsible for analysis and design
of information systems
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© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers Unit 1 Slide 6
Introduction (cont.)
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© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers Unit 1 Slide 7
A Modern Approach to Systems Analysis and Design
• 1950s: focus on efficient automation of existing processes• 1960s: advent of 3GL, faster and more reliable computers• 1970s: system development becomes more like an engineering
discipline• 1980s: major breakthrough with 4GL, CASE tools, object
oriented methods• 1990s: focus on system integration, GUI applications,
client/server platforms, Internet• The new century: Web application development, wireless PDAs,
component-based applications
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© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers Unit 1 Slide 8
Types of Information Systemsand Systems Development
• Transaction Processing Systems (TPS) Automate handling of data about business activities (transactions) Process orientation
• Management Information Systems (MIS) Converts raw data from transaction processing system into meaningful
form Data orientation
• Decision Support Systems (DSS) Designed to help decision makers Provides interactive environment for decision making Involves data warehouses, executive information systems (EIS) Database, model base, user dialogue
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© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers Unit 1 Slide 9
Types of Information Systemsand Systems Development (cont.)
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© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers Unit 1 Slide 10
Developing Information Systems and the SDLC
• System Development Methodology Standard process followed in an organization
consists of:• Analysis• Design• Implementation• Maintenance
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© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers Unit 1 Slide 11
Systems Development Life Cycle (SDLC)
• It is the traditional methodology for developing, maintaining, and replacing information systems
• Has the following phases: Planning Analysis Design Implementation Maintenance
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© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers Unit 1 Slide 12
Standard and Evolutionary Views of SDLC
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© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers Unit 1 Slide 13
SDLC Planning Phase
Identify, analyze, prioritize, and arrange IS needs
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© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers Unit 1 Slide 14
SDLC Analysis Phase
Study and structure system requirements
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© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers Unit 1 Slide 15
SDLC Design Phase
Convert recommended solution to system specifications
Logical design: functional features described independently of computer platform
Physical design: logical specifications transformed to technology-specific details
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© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers Unit 1 Slide 16
SDLC Implementation Phase
Code, test, install, and support the information system
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© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers Unit 1 Slide 17
SDLC Maintenance Phase
Systematically repair and improve the information system
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© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers Unit 1 Slide 18
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© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers Unit 1 Slide 19
The Heart of the Systems Development Process
Current practice combines analysis, design, and implementation into a single iterative and parallel process of activities
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© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers Unit 1 Slide 20
Traditional Waterfall SDLC
One phase begins when another completes, little backtracking and looping
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© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers Unit 1 Slide 21
Problems with Waterfall Approach
• System requirements “locked in” after being determined (can't change)
• Limited user involvement (only in requirements phase)
• Too much focus on milestone deadlines of SDLC phases to the detriment of sound development practices
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© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers Unit 1 Slide 22
Alternatives to Traditional Waterfall SDLC
• Prototyping• CASE tools• Joint Application Design (JAD)• Rapid Application Development (RAD)• Agile Methodologies• eXtreme Programming
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© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers Unit 1 Slide 23
Prototyping
Iterative development process: Requirements quickly converted to a working systemSystem is continually revisedCollaboration is closed between users and analysts
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© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers Unit 1 Slide 24
CASE Tools
• Computer-Aided Software Engineering• Software tools providing automated support
for systems development• Project dictionary/workbook: system
description and specifications• Diagramming tools• Example products: Oracle Designer, Rational
Rose
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© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers Unit 1 Slide 25
Joint Application Design (JAD)
• Structured process involving users, analysts, and managers
• Several-day intensive workgroup sessions• Purpose: to specify or review system
requirements
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© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers Unit 1 Slide 26
Rapid Application Development (RAD)
• Methodology to decrease design and implementation time• Involves: prototyping, JAD, CASE tools, and code generators
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© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers Unit 1 Slide 27
Agile Methodologies
• Motivated by recognition of software development as fluid, unpredictable, and dynamic
• Three key principles Adaptive rather than predictive Emphasize people rather than roles Self-adaptive processes
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© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers Unit 1 Slide 28
eXtreme Programming
• Short, incremental development cycles• Automated tests• Two-person programming teams• Coding and testing operate together• Advantages:
Communication between developers High level of productivity High-quality code
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© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers Unit 1 Slide 29
Object-Oriented Analysis and Design
• Based on objects rather than data or processes• Object: a structure encapsulating attributes and
behaviors of a real-world entity• Object class: a logical grouping of objects sharing the
same attributes and behaviors• Inheritance: hierarchical arrangement of classes
enable subclasses to inherit properties of superclasses
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© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers Unit 1 Slide 30
Rational Unified Process (RUP) involves an iterative, incremental approach to systems development
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© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers Unit 1 Slide 31
Summary• In this chapter you learned how to:
1. Describe different types of information systems.
Define information systems analysis and design. Describe the different types of information systems.
2. Compare different methods to distribute information systems and data.
Describe the different types of information systems. Explain the Systems Development Life Cycle (SLDC).
![Page 32: Chapter 1 The Systems Development Environment](https://reader035.fdocuments.net/reader035/viewer/2022062321/56812c28550346895d909dde/html5/thumbnails/32.jpg)
© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers Unit 1 Slide 32
Summary
3. Explain the Systems Development Life Cycle (SLDC). Describe the Information Systems Development
Life Cycle (SDLC).
5. Classify different types of software development models. Explain Rapid Application Development (RAD)
and it constituent parts: prototyping, Joint Application Design (JAD), and Computer-Aided Software Engineering (CASE) tools.
![Page 33: Chapter 1 The Systems Development Environment](https://reader035.fdocuments.net/reader035/viewer/2022062321/56812c28550346895d909dde/html5/thumbnails/33.jpg)
© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers Unit 1 Slide 33
Summary
Describe the Agile Methodologies and eXtreme Programming.
Explain object-oriented analysis and design and the Rational Unified Process (RUP).