| A J H Simons. Use cases considered harmful. In Proc. 29th Conf. Tech. Obj.-Oriented Prog. Lang. and Sys., (TOOLS-29 Europe), pages 194--203. IEEE Computer Society, 1999. |
.... and are still not entirely satisfactory; they induce arbitrary goto like jumps in the flow of control, extends is used in the literature and in practice for purposes for which it is not adequate, and neither relationship is su#cient to address long range dependencies between use cases [23]. Breitman and Leite define and use relationships between scenarios (overlap, equivalence, and subset) to classify and guide the evolution of scenarios [24] Alspaugh et al. discuss the importance of dependency relationships between scenarios and their preservation as the scenarios evolve [2] ....
Anthony J. H. Simons, "Use cases considered harmful," in 29th Conference on Technology of Object-Oriented Languages and Systems, 1999, pp. 194--203.
....daily work of modellers, but will be carried out by specialists. Further, we expect that there will be public scrutiny of prefaces, just as there is now public scrutiny of the current definition of the UML, such as that by Schrr and Winter (1997) concerning flaws in the packaging concept, and by Simons (1999) concerning interpretations of use cases. 8. A possible extension In simple terms, the overall information path from a UML model to an executable system is shown by the middle row of boxes and arrows in Figure 5. On the left of the figure is a UML model, built using the syntactic elements ....
Simons A (1999). Use cases considered harmful. In Mitchell R, Wills A, Bosch J and Meyer B (editors). Proceedings of TOOLS 29. IEEE.
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A J H Simons. Use cases considered harmful. In Proc. 29th Conf. Tech. Obj.-Oriented Prog. Lang. and Sys., (TOOLS-29 Europe), pages 194--203. IEEE Computer Society, 1999.
No context found.
A. J. H. Simons. Use cases considered harmful. In TOOLS-29 Europe, pages 194-203. IEEE Computer Society, 1999.
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A. J. H. Simons. Use cases considered harmful. In International Conference on Technology of Object-Oriented Programming Languages and Systems (TOOLS-29 Europe), pages 194-203. IEEE Computer Society, 1999.
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