Modern Systems Analysis and Design
Sixth Edition
Jeffrey A. Hoffer Joey F. George Joseph S. Valacich
Chapter 1 Systems Development in an Organizational Context
Learning Objectives
Define information systems analysis and design. Describe the information Systems Development Life Cycle (SDLC). Explain Rapid Application Development (RAD), prototyping, Computer Aided Software Engineering (CASE), and Service-Oriented Architecture (SOA). Describe agile methodologies and eXtreme programming. Explain Object Oriented Analysis and Design and the Rational Unified Process (RUP).
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Introduction
Information Systems Analysis and Design
Complex
organizational process Used to develop and maintain computerbased information systems Used by a team of business and systems professionals
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Introduction (Cont.)
FIGURE 1-1 An organizational approach to systems analysis and design is driven by methodologies, techniques, and tools
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A Modern Approach to Systems Analysis and Design
1950s: focus on efficient automation of existing processes 1960s: advent of 3GL, faster and more reliable computers 1970s: system development becomes more like an engineering discipline
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A Modern Approach to Systems Analysis and Design (Cont.)
1980s: major breakthrough with 4GL, CASE tools, object oriented methods 1990s: focus on system integration, GUI applications, client/server platforms, Internet The new century: Web application development, wireless PDAs, componentbased applications
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A Modern Approach to Systems Analysis and Design (Cont.)
Application Software
Computer
software designed to support organizational functions or processes role most responsible for analysis and design of information systems
Systems Analyst
Organizational
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Developing Information Systems
System Development Methodology is a standard process followed in an organization to conduct all the steps necessary to analyze, design, implement, and maintain information systems.
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Systems Development Life Cycle (SDLC)
Traditional methodology used to develop, maintain, and replace information systems. Phases in SDLC:
Planning Analysis Design Implementation Maintenance
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Standard and Evolutionary Views of SDLC
FIGURE 1-2 The systems development life cycle
FIGURE 1-3 Evolutionary model
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Systems Development Life Cycle (SDLC) (Cont.)
Planning an organizations total information system needs are identified, analyzed, prioritized, and arranged Analysis system requirements are studied and structured
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Systems Development Life Cycle (SDLC) (Cont.)
Design a description of the recommended solution is converted into logical and then physical system specifications Logical design all functional features of the system chosen for development in analysis are described independently of any computer platform
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Systems Development Life Cycle (SDLC) (Cont.)
Physical design the logical specifications of the system from logical design are transformed into the technology-specific details from which all programming and system construction can be accomplished
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Systems Development Life Cycle (SDLC) (Cont.)
Implementation the information system is coded, tested, installed and supported in the organization Maintenance an information system is systematically repaired and improved
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The Heart of the Systems Development Process
FIGURE 1-7 The analysisdesigncodetest loop FIGURE 1-8 The heart of systems development
Current practice combines analysis, design, and implementation into a single iterative and parallel process of activities.
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Traditional Waterfall SDLC
One phase begins when another completes, with little backtracking and looping.
FIGURE 1-9 A traditional waterfall SDLC
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Problems with Waterfall Approach
System requirements locked in after being determined (can't change) Limited user involvement (only in requirements phase) Too much focus on milestone deadlines of SDLC phases to the detriment of sound development practices
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Different Approaches to Improving Development
CASE
Tools Rapid Application Development (RAD) Agile Methodologies eXtreme Programming
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Computer-Aided Software Engineering (CASE) Tools
Diagramming tools enable graphical representation. Computer displays and report generators help prototype how systems look and feel.
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Computer-Aided Software Engineering (CASE) Tools (Cont.)
Analysis tools automatically check for consistency in diagrams, forms, and reports. A central repository provides integrated storage of diagrams, reports, and project management specifications.
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Computer-Aided Software Engineering (CASE) Tools (Cont.)
Documentation generators standardize technical and user documentation. Code generators enable automatic generation of programs and database code directly from design documents, diagrams, forms, and reports.
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CASE Tools (Cont.)
FIGURE 1-10 A class diagram from IBMs Rational Rose (Source: IBM)
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CASE Tools (Cont.)
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Rapid Application Development (RAD)
Methodology
to radically decrease design and implementation time Involves: extensive user involvement, prototyping, JAD sessions, integrated CASE tools, and code generators
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Rapid Application Development (RAD) (Cont.)
FIGURE 1-11 RAD life cycle
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Service-Oriented Architecture (SOA)
An
approach to systems development based on building complete systems through assembling software components, each of which model generic business functions
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Service-Oriented Architecture (SOA) (Cont.)
FIGURE 1-12 Illustration of a service, a credit check, used by applications and other services
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Agile Methodologies
Motivated by recognition of software development as fluid, unpredictable, and dynamic Three key principles
Adaptive
rather than predictive Emphasize people rather than roles Self-adaptive processes
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The Agile Methodologies group argues that software development methodologies adapted from engineering generally do not fit with realworld software development.
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When to use Agile Methodologies
If your project involves:
Unpredictable
or dynamic requirements Responsible and motivated developers Customers who understand the process and will get involved
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eXtreme Programming
Short, incremental development cycles Automated tests Two-person programming teams
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eXtreme Programming (Cont.)
Coding and testing operate together Advantages:
Communication
between developers High level of productivity High-quality code
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Object-Oriented Analysis and Design (OOAD)
Based
on objects rather than data or processes Object: a structure encapsulating attributes and behaviors of a realworld entity
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Object-Oriented Analysis and Design (OOAD) (Cont.)
Object
class: a logical grouping of objects sharing the same attributes and behaviors Inheritance: hierarchical arrangement of classes enable subclasses to inherit properties of superclasses
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Rational Unified Process (RUP)
An object-oriented systems development methodology RUP establishes four phase of development: inception, elaboration, construction, and transition. Each phase is organized into a number of separate iterations.
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FIGURE 1-13 Phases of OOSAD-based development
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Our Approach to Systems Development
The SDLC is an organizing and guiding principle in this book. We may construct artificial boundaries or artificially separate activities and processes for learning purposes. Our intent is to help you understand all the pieces and how to assemble them.
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Summary
In this chapter you learned how to:
Define information systems analysis and design. Describe the information Systems Development Life Cycle (SDLC). Explain Rapid Application Development (RAD), prototyping, Computer Aided Software Engineering (CASE), and Service-Oriented Architecture (SOA). Describe agile methodologies and eXtreme programming. Explain Object Oriented Analysis and Design and the Rational Unified Process (RUP).
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All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher. Printed in the United States of America.
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