| J. Coel, J. Hare, K. Harvey, C. Krasnor, A. Lawton, D. L. Parnas, D. K. Peters, J. Sterling, and M. Wang. Table tool system developer's guide. CRL Report 339, Communications Research Laboratory, Faculty of Engineering, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, January 1997. |
....using Tabular Expressions 3 to supplement, not replace, notation that is already in use by many engineers. They have been found useful for describing the speci ed mathematical relations in practical applications [7, 21, 22, 23, 36, 48] When they are handled by a tool, like Table Tool System [8, 9], they are suitable for managing change for systems and families of systems. Since, it is not true that determining requirements is an isolated and unique phase of the development. Engineers have to talk to a wide range of people some of whom don t have enough mathematical background to ....
.... the library system, that when we detect an incoherence between the scenarios we need to go back in order to modify our formal scenarios, according to the procedure (23) So, the tabular representations of the relations of the scenarios, when they are handled by a tool, like the Table Tool System [8, 9], they facilitate the update of formal scenarios. Moreover, they ensure that the artifacts of requirements engineering are maintainable. Speci cally, this avoid that the discovering of an incoherence between scenarios or an other error will be seen as a drama by practitioners, since they have to ....
J. Coel, J. Hare, K. Harvey, C. Krasnor, A. Lawton, D. L. Parnas, D. K. Peters, J. Sterling, and M. Wang. Table tool system developer's guide. CRL Report 339, Communications Research Laboratory, Faculty of Engineering, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, January 1997.
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