Appendix 2 Automated Tools for Systems Development © 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers: Unit 2 Slide 1.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Systems Development Environment
Advertisements

CSC271 Database Systems Lecture # 18. Summary: Previous Lecture  Transactions  Authorization  Authorization identifier, ownership, privileges  GRANT/REVOKE.
Ch 3 System Development Environment
© 2005 by Prentice Hall Appendix 2 Automated Tools for Systems Development Modern Systems Analysis and Design Fourth Edition Jeffrey A. Hoffer Joey F.
Copyright 2004 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Essentials of Systems Analysis and Design Second Edition Joseph S. Valacich Joey F. George Jeffrey A. Hoffer Appendix.
Case Tools Trisha Cummings. Our Definition of CASE  CASE is the use of computer-based support in the software development process.  A CASE tool is a.
Chapter 7 CASE Tools and Joint and Rapid Application Development.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall Essentials of Systems Analysis and Design Fourth Edition Joseph S. Valacich Joey F.
Chapter 14 Maintaining Information Systems Modern Systems Analysis and Design Seventh Edition Jeffrey A. Hoffer Joey F. George Joseph S. Valacich.
11.1 Lecture 11 CASE tools IMS Systems Design and Implementation.
Copyright 2002 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Chapter 4 Automated Tools for Systems Development 4.1 Modern Systems Analysis and Design Third Edition.
ISMT221 Information Systems Analysis and Design Project Management Tools Lab 1 Tony Tam.
Requirements Analysis 5. 1 CASE b505.ppt © Copyright De Montfort University 2000 All Rights Reserved INFO2005 Requirements Analysis CASE Computer.
Copyright 2002 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Chapter 4 Automated Tools for Systems Development 4.1 Modern Systems Analysis and Design Third Edition Jeffrey A. Hoffer.
Copyright 2002 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Chapter 1 The Systems Development Environment 1.1 Modern Systems Analysis and Design Third Edition Jeffrey A. Hoffer.
IMS Information Systems Development Practices
9.1 Quality and productivity issues in information systems development: CASE tools and prototyping IMS Information Systems Development Practices.
CHAPTER 3: Managing the Information Systems Project
Supplement 02CASE Tools1 Supplement 02 - Case Tools And Franchise Colleges By MANSHA NAWAZ.
Copyright 2006 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Essentials of Systems Analysis and Design Third Edition Joseph S. Valacich Joey F. George Jeffrey A. Hoffer Chapter.
Chapter 1 The Systems Development Environment Modern Systems Analysis and Design Sixth Edition Jeffrey A. Hoffer Joey F. George Joseph S. Valacich.
Introduction to Systems Analysis and Design
©Ian Sommerville 2004Software Engineering, 7th edition. Chapter 8 Slide 1 Tools of Software Development l 2 types of tools used by software engineers:
Chapter 14 Maintaining Information Systems
Chapter 1 The Systems Development Environment
© 2005 by Prentice Hall Appendix 2 Automated Tools for Systems Development Modern Systems Analysis and Design Fourth Edition Jeffrey A. Hoffer Joey F.
Chapter 1 The Systems Development Environment
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall 1.1.
The Systems Development Environment. Learning Objectives Define information systems analysis and design. Describe the different types of information systems.
Systems Analysis – Analyzing Requirements.  Analyzing requirement stage identifies user information needs and new systems requirements  IS dev team.
CASE Tool Evolution Computer-aided documentation Computer- aided diagramming Analysis and design tools Automated design analysis Automated.
Describing Methodologies PART II Rapid Application Development*
Maintaining Information Systems Modern Systems Analysis and Design.
Managing the development and purchase of information systems (Part 1)
Transaction Processing Systems and System Development Life Cycle
Copyright 2002 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Chapter 1 The Systems Development Environment 1.1 Modern Systems Analysis and Design.
Copyright 2002 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Chapter 1 The Systems Development Environment 1.1 Modern Systems Analysis and Design Third Edition Jeffrey A. Hoffer.
The Systems Development Methodologies. Objectives  Describe the information Systems Development Life Cycle (SDLC)  Explain prototyping  Explain Rapid.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 7 CASE Tools and Joint and Rapid Application Development.
Approaches to Systems Development Week 2 CMIS570.
CASE Form and Report Generator Tools Done by Hessa AlSubaie Aisha AlOmani.
Copyright 2001 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Essentials of Systems Analysis and Design Joseph S. Valacich Joey F. George Jeffrey A. Hoffer Appendix B Rapid Application.
Content The system development life cycle
Computers Are Your Future Tenth Edition Chapter 13: Systems Analysis & Design Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall1.
ANKITHA CHOWDARY GARAPATI
Chapter 6 CASE Tools Software Engineering Chapter 6-- CASE TOOLS
CASE (Computer-Aided Software Engineering) Tools Software that is used to support software process activities. Provides software process support by:- –
Chapter 1 Introduction to Systems Design and Analysis Systems Analysis and Design Kendall and Kendall Sixth Edition.
Copyright 2002 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Chapter 4 Automated Tools for Systems Development 4.1 Modern Systems Analysis and Design.
Chapter 4 Automated Tools for Systems Development Modern Systems Analysis and Design Third Edition 4.1.
The Systems Development Environment Systems Analysis and Design II.
NURHALIMA 1. Identify the trade-offs when using CASE Describe organizational forces for and against adoption of CASE tools Describe the role of CASE tools.
CASE Tools and their Effect on Software Quality
CASE (Computer-Aided Software Engineering) Tools
Chapter 14 Maintaining Information Systems
Appendix 2 Automated Tools for Systems Development
Modern Systems Analysis and Design Third Edition
CASE Tools and Joint and Rapid Application Development
Modern Systems Analysis and Design Third Edition
Business System Development
Tools of Software Development
Chapter 4 Automated Tools for Systems Development
Modern Systems Analysis and Design Third Edition
Modern Systems Analysis and Design Third Edition
MANAGING THE DEVELOPMENT AND PURCHASE OF INFORMATION SYSTEMS
©Ian Sommerville 2004Software Engineering, 7th edition. Chapter 8 Slide 1 Tools of Software Development l 2 types of tools used by software engineers:
Modern Systems Analysis and Design Third Edition
Presentation transcript:

Appendix 2 Automated Tools for Systems Development © 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers: Unit 2 Slide 1

© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers: Unit 2 Slide 2 Learning Objectives 14.Explain the role of prototyping and CASE tools in capturing design specifications.  Identify the tradeoffs when using CASE to support systems development activities.  Describe organizational forces for and against the adoption of CASE tools.  Describe the role of CASE tools and how they are used to support activities within the SDLC.  List and describe the typical components of a comprehensive CASE environment.

© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers: Unit 2 Slide 3 Learning Objectives  Describe the general functions of upper CASE tools, lower CASE tools, cross-life CASE tools, and the CASE repository.

© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers: Unit 2 Slide 4 What is CASE? CASE stands for Computer-aided Software Engineering Features of CASE:  It refers to software tools that provide automated support for some portions of the system development process  It is used to support or automate activities throughout the systems development life cycle (SDLC)  It helps in increasing productivity  It improves overall quality of systems

© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers: Unit 2 Slide 5 Purpose of CASE is to facilitate a single design philosophy within an organization.

© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers: Unit 2 Slide 6 Organizational Objectives of CASE Improve quality of systems developed Increase speed of development and design Ease and improve testing process through automated checking Improve integration of development activities via common methodologies Improve quality and completeness of documentation Help standardize the development process Improve project management Simplify program maintenance Promote reusability Improve software portability

© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers: Unit 2 Slide 7 Impediments to Widespread CASE Deployment Cost  Between $5,000 and $15,000 per year to provide CASE tools to one systems analyst Return on Investment  Biggest benefits of CASE come in late stages of SDLC Productivity Bottlenecks  Inability of some tools to share information  Difficulty in providing tools for all stages of SDLC

© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers: Unit 2 Slide 8 The Outlook for CASE Functionality is increasing Cost is decreasing Reverse Engineering Tools  Automated tools that read program source code as input and create graphical and textual representations of program design-level information Reengineering Tools  Automated software that reads program source code, analyzes it and automatically or interactively alters an existing system to improve quality and/or performance

© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers: Unit 2 Slide 9

© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers: Unit 2 Slide 10 Impact of CASE on Individuals Systems analysts: automate routine tasks Programmers: piece together objects created by code generators Users: increased participation via upper CASE tools Top managers: CASE-based planning assists with strategy development Functional managers: CASE helps reengineer business processes IS managers: CASE gives better control over IS development processes

© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers: Unit 2 Slide 11 Forces For and Against CASE Adoption Driving forces:  Short development time  Improved productivity  Improved system quality  Improved worker skills  Improved portability  Improved management Resisting forces:  High purchase cost  High training cost  Low organizational confidence  Lack of standards  Perceived threat to job security

© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers: Unit 2 Slide 12 Categories of CASE Upper CASE: support information planning, project identification and selection, project initiation and planning, analysis and design Lower CASE: support the implementation and maintenance phases of the systems development life cycle Cross life-cycle CASE: support activities that occur across multiple phases of the systems development life cycle

© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers: Unit 2 Slide 13 Types of CASE Tools Diagramming tools Computer display and report generators Analysis tools used to check for incomplete, inconsistent or incorrect specifications A central repository Documentation generators Code generators

© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers: Unit 2 Slide 14

© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers: Unit 2 Slide 15 CASE versus Traditional Systems Development Traditional approach does not offer support for integration of specification documents. Often, documentation is done after coding is completed in traditional systems development. Traditional approach often leads to out- of- date documentation.

© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers: Unit 2 Slide 16 CASE versus Traditional Systems Development (cont.) Traditional Systems Development:  Emphasis on coding and testing  Paper-based specifications  Manual coding of programs  Manual documenting  Intensive software testing  Maintain code and documentation CASE-Based Systems Development:  Emphasis on analysis and design  Rapid interactive prototyping  Automated code generation  Automated documentation generation  Automated design checking  Maintain design specifications

© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers: Unit 2 Slide 17 CASE Diagramming Tools Enable representation of a system and components visually Effective for representing process flows, data structures and program structures Several types of diagrams, including:  Data Flow Diagrams (DFD)  Class Diagrams  Entity-Relationship Diagrams

© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers: Unit 2 Slide 18

© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers: Unit 2 Slide 19 CASE Form and Report Generator Tools are the CASE tools that support the creation of system forms and reports in order to prototype how systems will look and feel to users Purposes:  To create, modify, and test prototypes of computer display forms and reports  To identify data items to display or collect for each form or report

© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers: Unit 2 Slide 20

© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers: Unit 2 Slide 21 CASE Analysis Tools Enable automatic checking for incomplete, inconsistent, or incorrect specifications in diagrams, forms and reports. Types of analyses vary depending on the organization’s development methodology and features of CASE environment.

© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers: Unit 2 Slide 22 Integrated CASE (I-CASE) Tools Automated systems development environment that provides numerous tools to create diagrams, forms and reports Provides analysis, reporting and code generation facilities Seamlessly shares and integrates data across and between tools Includes a central CASE Repository to store information to share between tools

© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers: Unit 2 Slide 23 The CASE repository contains complete information needed to create, modify and evolve a software system from project initiation and planning to code generation and maintenance.

© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers: Unit 2 Slide 24 Information Repository: Combines information about an organization’s business information and its application portfolio Data Dictionary: Contains data definitions for all organizational applications

© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers: Unit 2 Slide 25 Use of CASE Repository CASE Repository and the SDLC  Project initiation and planning problem domain, project resources, history and organizational context  Analysis and design phases graphical diagrams and prototype forms and reports Repository data used to generate code and documentation

© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers: Unit 2 Slide 26 Use of CASE Repository Assistance with project management tasks Aids in software reusability  The ability to design software modules in a manner so that they can be used again and again in different systems without significant modification

© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers: Unit 2 Slide 27

© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers: Unit 2 Slide 28 Other CASE Tools CASE Documentation Generator Tools  Simplifies production of technical and user documentation  Master templates to verify that documentation conforms to all stages of SDLC CASE Code Generation Tools  Automatic generation of program and database definition code directly from the design documents, diagrams, forms and reports

© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers: Unit 2 Slide 29 Summary In this chapter you learned how to : 14.Explain the role of prototyping and CASE tools in capturing design specifications.  Identify the tradeoffs when using CASE to support systems development activities.  Describe organizational forces for and against the adoption of CASE tools.  Describe the role of CASE tools and how they are used to support activities within the SDLC.  List and describe the typical components of a comprehensive CASE environment.

© 2006 ITT Educational Services Inc. SE350 System Analysis for Software Engineers: Unit 2 Slide 30 Summary  Describe the general functions of upper CASE tools, lower CASE tools, cross-life CASE tools, and the CASE repository.