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🌫 19 Setembro 2023 - #RAS
Contents
- RAS/T - Aula 2#Definition of Requirement
- RAS/T - Aula 2#Functional requirements
- RAS/T - Aula 2#Non-functional requirements
- RAS/T - Aula 2#4. User and system requirements
- RAS/T - Aula 2#Recap
1. Definition of Requirement
The requirements express the users necessities and restrictions that are placed on the system.
A requirement is a capacity that a system must possess, to satisfy the users necessities.
The IEEE 610.12-1990 standard definition divides requirements into two alternatives:
- user needs
- system capacities
Requirements can be divided into:
- functional requirements
- non-functional requirements
A requirement that for a stakeholder can be perceived as being functional, can be considered as non-functional for a different one.
[!info] A candidate requirement is a requirement that was identified by some elicitation technique.
2. Functional requirements
[!tip] Definition A functional requirement describes a functionality to be made available to the users of the system.
- This type of requirements should not mention any technological issue.
- Ideally, functional requirements must be independent of design and implementation aspects.
[!note]- Note: Cohesion and Completion Collectively, the set of functional requirements must be complete and coherent. The set is:
- coherent, if there are no contradictions among its elements;
- complete, if it considers all the necessities that the client wishes to see satisfied.
Defining complete requirements is the most difficult attribute to achieve or evaluate.
[!note]- Note: Implicit and Explicit Requirements Implicit requirements are referred like that because the client may not be aware about these requirements.
An implicit requirement is a requirement included by the development team, based on the domain knowledge that it possesses, in spite of not having been explicitly requested by the stakeholders.
An explicit requirement refers to a requirement that was requested by the clients and that is represented in the documentation.
3. Non-functional requirements
[!tip] Definition A non-functional requirement corresponds to a set of restrictions imposed on the system to be developed.
- Alternative terms: quality requirement or quality attribute
- It establishes how attractive, fast, or reliable the system is.
- It includes time constraints, restrictions in the development process, or adoption of standards.
[!example]- Example: Technological restriction The product must be developed in C++.
[!info] A non-functional requirement does not change the essence of the system functionalities.
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Non-functional requirements are applicable to the system as a whole and not just to some of its parts, as, generally, non-functional requirements cannot be modularized.
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The non-functional requirements are frequently emergent properties of the system at hand. An emergent property of a system is a property that can be associated with the system as a whole, but not individually to each of its components.
- Reliability is a good example of an emergent property.
[!info] Non-functional requirements are crucial to decide the system architecture.
3.1 Classification of non-functional requirements
[!tip]- Classification: Sommerville (2010)
- product requirements: characterise aspects of the behaviour of the system itself (reliability, performance, efficiency, portability, usability, testability, and readability).
- organisational requirements: come from strategies and procedures established in the context of the manufacturing process of the system or the client organisation (process standards and implementation requirements).
- external requirements: have origin in external factors to the system and the development process (interoperability, legal, and ethical requirements).
[!tip]- Classification: Roberson and Roberson (2006)
- appearance: the aspect and the aesthetics of the system;
- usability: the easiness of utilization of the system and everything that permits a more friendly user experience;
- performance: aspects of speed, real-time, storage capacity, and execution correction;
- operational: characteristics about what the system must do to work correctly in the environment where it is inserted;
- maintenance and support: attributes that allow the system to be repaired or improved and new functionalities to be added;
- security: issues related to access, confidentiality, protection, and integrity of the data;
- cultural and political: factors related to the stakeholders culture and habits;
- legal: laws that apply to the system so that it can operate.
3.1.1 Usability
- Ease of use is related to the efficiency of utilizing a system and with the mechanisms that reduce the errors made by the users.
- Personalization is associated with the capacity of adapting the system to the tastes of the users.
- Ease of learning is concerned with the way users are trained to use the system.
- Accessibility indicates how easy it is to use the system, for people who are somehow physically or mentally disabled.
[!example]- Example: Usability requirements
- The product shall be easy to use for illiterate persons.
- The product shall be intuitive to use for children with 4 years old.
- The product shall be usable by visually impaired persons.
3.1.2 Maintenance and support
- System maintenance is divided into four types: preventive, corrective, perfective, and adaptive.
- Modifiability is related to maintenance and is dependent on how easy it is to locate the components that must be changed.
[!example]- Example: Maintenance and support requirements
- The source code of the product programs should contain comments.
- The product must be prepared to be translated to any language.
3.1.3 Legal
[!example]- Example: Legal requirements
- The product shall be aligned with the PMBoK guide.
- The product shall be certified by the Taxing Authority.
- The product shall fulfil with the copyright.
4. User and system requirements
A user requirement represents:
- a functionality that the system is expected to provide to its users;
- a restriction that is applicable to the operation of that system.
- These requirements are related to the problem domain.
- They are normally expressed without great mathematical rigour, using natural language and informal diagrams.
A system requirement constitutes a more detailed specification of a requirement, being generally a formal model of the system. These requirements are oriented towards the solution domain, and are documented in a more technical language than the one adopted for the user requirements.
4.1 Problem domain
- The requirements result from necessities that exist in the problem domain to be addressed.
- User requirements should be described with the problem domain terminology.
Recap
- Requirements represent the necessities of the users and the constraints that are applied to a system and that must be considered throughout the development.
- The requirements can be classified, according to a first criterion, as either functional or non-functional.
- Non-functional requirements are divided in 8 different types: appearance, usability, performance, operational, maintenance and support, security, cultural and political, and legal.
- The requirements can be designated as either user or system requirements.
- User requirements are related to the problem domain and are usually expressed in a natural language.
- A system requirement is oriented towards the solution domain and is a detailed specification of a requirement, generally in the form of a formal model of the system.