Business Analysis for Information Technology
Books and Selected Products
Addison Wesley
September 2002
Paperback, 424 pages
ISBN: 0201767929

Description
This book is intended for undergraduates encountering software requirements engineering for the first time. It is a hard subject for which there is no formulaic approach. It therefore begins with small, relatively simple case studies and builds on these to provide the opportunities to scale up this expertise to large industrial projects. The foundations, so often glossed over, are carefully developed to give the reader an understanding of why particular approaches and techniques are appropriate in different situations.
Features
Backcover Copy
Shelving category: Software Engineering/Software Requirements/Requirements Engineering
Introduction to Requirements Engineering
Ian K Bray
The focus of software engineering is moving from writing reliable large–scale software to ensuring that this software meets the needs of the users for whom it was designed. Investigating and describing the (often changing) requirements and their context, together with the determination and documentation of the characteristics of a system that will meet those requirements, is the domain of requirements engineering.
This book is intended for undergraduates encountering software requirements engineering for the first time. It is a hard subject for which there is no formulaic approach. It therefore begins with small, relatively simple case studies and builds on these to provide the opportunities to scale up this expertise to large industrial projects. The foundations, so often glossed over, are carefully developed to give the reader an understanding of why particular approaches and techniques are appropriate in different situations.
The book is divided into three parts: the first provides a guide to all the important requirements engineering topics; the second gives more detail on useful techniques (for problem definition and modelling); the third contains the complete case studies, extracts from which are used in parts one and two. Requirements engineering is a jargon–filled subject, so a comprehensive glossary is provided as well as definitions within the text.
Key features
Ian Bray
is a part time Senior Lecturer at Bournemouth University, where he has taught requirements engineering to undergraduates and postgraduates since 1990. Previously he held various posts in the software engineering industry including designer, analyst, software quality assurance manager and customer support manager.