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Structured Vs. Object Oriented Analysis and Design SAD Vs. OOAD

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Presentation on theme: "Structured Vs. Object Oriented Analysis and Design SAD Vs. OOAD"— Presentation transcript:

1 Structured Vs. Object Oriented Analysis and Design SAD Vs. OOAD

2 Software process model
Requirements Specification Design and Implementation Validation Evolution

3 A model is an abstract view of a system
Modeling A model is an abstract view of a system We create a model to gain better understanding of an entity, for example a model of a plane is a small plane. When the entity is software, the model takes a different form.

4 A software model must be capable of representing :
the information that the software transforms, the functions that enable the transformation to occur, and the behavior of the system as the transformation takes place.

5 Structured Analysis Vs. Object Oriented Modeling
1-Behavioural Models: Data processing models that show how data is processed as it moves through the system (Data Flow Diagram -DFD and Entity Relation diagram- ER). Will be covered in this course 2- OR Object Models: Use case diagrams and Class diagram. Focus on Objects rather than data or process Covered in previous course

6 Object Oriented Analysis and Design OOAD

7 Commonly used UML diagram types
Activity diagrams, which show the activities involved in a process or in data processing . Use case diagrams, which show the interactions between a system and its environment. Sequence diagrams, which show interactions between actors and the system and between system components. Class diagrams, which show the object classes in the system and the associations between these classes. State diagrams, which show how the system reacts to internal and external events.

8 1- Context Model for ATM Context models show what lies outside the system boundaries.

9 2- Interaction models A- Use case
A use case in the MHC-PMS

10 2- Interaction models B- Sequence diagrams
Sequence diagrams are part of the UML and are used to model the interactions between the actors and the objects within a system. A sequence diagram shows the sequence of interactions that take place during a particular use case or use case instance. The objects and actors involved are listed along the top of the diagram, with a dotted line drawn vertically from these. Interactions between objects are indicated by annotated arrows.

11 Ex: Sequence diagram for View patient information

12 3- Structural models A- Class diagrams
An association is a link between classes that indicates that there is some relationship between these classes. When you are developing models during the early stages of the software engineering process, think of objects represent something in the real world, such as a patient, a prescription, doctor, etc.

13 Ex: Classes and associations in the MHC-PMS

14 Ex:The Consultation class

15 4- Behavioral models Behavioral models are models of the dynamic behavior of a system as it is executing. They show what happens or what is supposed to happen when a system responds to a stimulus from its environment.

16 4- Behavioral models A- Data-driven modeling – Activity diagram
Many business systems are data-processing systems that are primarily driven by data. They are controlled by the data input to the system, with relatively little external event processing. Data-driven models show the sequence of actions involved in processing input data and generating an associated output. They are particularly useful during the analysis of requirements as they can be used to show end-to-end processing in a system.

17 Data-driven modeling Data flow diagrams (DFDs) may be used to model the system’s data processing. These show the processing steps as data flows through a system. UML does not support DFDs . UML use activity diagram instead.

18 Ex: An activity model of the insulin pump’s operation

19 4- Behavioral models B- Event-driven modeling - State diagram
Event-driven modeling shows how a system responds to external and internal events.

20 Ex: State diagram of a microwave oven

21 Structures Analysis and Design SAD

22 Ex: DFD Context diagram shows the system boundaries, external entities that interact with the system, and major information flows between entities and the system.

23 Structures Analysis Vs. Object Oriented

24 Incremental/Iterative SDLC Object Process Emerging
Comparison Object Oriented Structured Incremental/Iterative SDLC Methodology Object Process Focus Emerging Mature and wide spread Maturity Large projects with changing requirements Well defined projects with stable user requirements Suitable for

25

26 We can always use a tool to draw any model

27 What is CASE? CASE (Computer Aided Software Engineering) Programs used to support software process activities such as system modeling, debugging, and testing Some CASE tools include automatic code generation from diagrams.

28 References oriented-analysis-and-design Sommerville, Ian ,“Software Engineering”, 9th edition, PEARSON


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