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Chapter 01wht

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Chapter 1
The Product
These courseware materials are to be used in conjunction with Software Engineering: A Practitioner’s Approach, 5/e and are
provided with permission by R.S. Pressman & Associates, Inc., copyright © 1996, 2001
1
What is Software?
1) instructions (programs) that when
executed provide desired function and
performance
2) data structures that enable the programs to
adequately manipulate information
3) documents that describe the operation and
use of the programs
A logical rather than physical system element
These courseware materials are to be used in conjunction with Software Engineering: A Practitioner’s Approach, 5/e and are
provided with permission by R.S. Pressman & Associates, Inc., copyright © 1996, 2001
2
What is Software?
software is engineered
software doesn’t wear out
software is custom built
software is complex
These courseware materials are to be used in conjunction with Software Engineering: A Practitioner’s Approach, 5/e and are
provided with permission by R.S. Pressman & Associates, Inc., copyright © 1996, 2001
3
Failure (“Bathtub”) Curve for Hardware
Failure Rate
Infant
mortality
Wear
out
Time
These courseware materials are to be used in conjunction with Software Engineering: A Practitioner’s Approach, 5/e and are
provided with permission by R.S. Pressman & Associates, Inc., copyright © 1996, 2001
4
Wear vs. Deterioration
These courseware materials are to be used in conjunction with Software Engineering: A Practitioner’s Approach, 5/e and are
provided with permission by R.S. Pressman & Associates, Inc., copyright © 1996, 2001
5
Software Applications
system software
real-time software
business software
engineering/scientific software
embedded software
PC software
WebApps (Web applications)
 AI software
These courseware materials are to be used in conjunction with Software Engineering: A Practitioner’s Approach, 5/e and are
provided with permission by R.S. Pressman & Associates, Inc., copyright © 1996, 2001
6
Software Myths
 Management
 We have standards
 We have new computers
 We’ll add more people to catch up
 I outsourced it, I’m done
 Customer
 We have general objectives, let’s start
 Change is easily accommodated
 Practitioner
 We’ll write it and be done
 I can’t assess quality until it is running
 I only need deliver code
 Software engineering is about meaningless documents
These courseware materials are to be used in conjunction with Software Engineering: A Practitioner’s Approach, 5/e and are
provided with permission by R.S. Pressman & Associates, Inc., copyright © 1996, 2001
7
The Cost of Change
These courseware materials are to be used in conjunction with Software Engineering: A Practitioner’s Approach, 5/e and are
provided with permission by R.S. Pressman & Associates, Inc., copyright © 1996, 2001
8
Software Poses Challenges
How do we ensure the quality of the software that
we produce?
How do we meet growing demand and still
maintain budget control?
How do we upgrade an aging "software plant?"
How do we avoid disastrous time delays?
How do we successfully institute new software
technologies?
These courseware materials are to be used in conjunction with Software Engineering: A Practitioner’s Approach, 5/e and are
provided with permission by R.S. Pressman & Associates, Inc., copyright © 1996, 2001
9
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