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Requirements & Specification Exemplars

Authors :
UCL - FSA/INGI - Département d'ingénierie informatique
Feather, Martin S.
Fickas, Stephen
Finkelstein, Anthony
van Lamsweerde, Axel
UCL - FSA/INGI - Département d'ingénierie informatique
Feather, Martin S.
Fickas, Stephen
Finkelstein, Anthony
van Lamsweerde, Axel
Source :
Automated Software Engineering : the international journal of automated reasoning and artificial intelligence in software engineering, Vol. 4, no.4, p. 419-438 (1997)
Publication Year :
1997

Abstract

Specification exemplars are familiar to most software engineering researchers. For instance, many will have encountered the well known library and lift problem statements, and will have seen one or more published specifications. Exemplars may serve several purposes: to drive and communicate individual research advances; to establish research agendas and to compare and contrast alternative approaches; and, ultimately, to lead to advances in software development practices. Because of their prevalence in the literature, exemplars are worth critical study. In this paper we consider the purposes that exemplars may serve, and explore the incompatibilities inherent in trying to serve several of them at once. Researchers should therefore be clear about what successfully handling an exemplar demonstrates. We go on to examine the use of exemplars not only for writing specifications (an end product of requirements engineering), but also for the requirements engineering process itself. In particular, requirements for good requirements exemplars are suggested and ways of obtaining such exemplars are discussed.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Automated Software Engineering : the international journal of automated reasoning and artificial intelligence in software engineering, Vol. 4, no.4, p. 419-438 (1997)
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1130500103
Document Type :
Electronic Resource