Writing Effective Use Cases by Alistair Cockburn

Writing Effective Use Cases



Download Writing Effective Use Cases




Writing Effective Use Cases Alistair Cockburn ebook
Page: 249
ISBN: 0201702258, 9780201702255
Publisher: Addison-Wesley Professional
Format: pdf


An excellent and practical reference on writing use cases is "Writing Effective Use Cases," by Alistair Cockburn, part of the Agile Software Development Series, ISBN 0-201-70225-8. Prentice Hall International Series in Industrial and Systems Engineering, USA. {Alistair Cockburn\'s Writing Effective Use Cases is an approachable, informative, and very intelligent treatment of an essential topic of software design. They are especially useful when the system of interest is in turn composed of other subsystems. (1998) Systems Engineering and Analysis, 3rd Ed. Whenever I have questions about use cases myself, I grab my use case bible which is Writing Effective Use Cases from Alistair Cockburn. We also found a good agile use case template from Enthiosys. The use case analysis for SPIN will be based on Alistair Cockburn's book "Writing Effective Use Cases". Having tried 'Use Cases: Requirements in Context' and 'Managing Software Requirements: A Use Case Approach' I can tell you this is the book to really understand. Alistair Cockburn, an expert on use cases describes in “Writing Effective Use Cases” (2001) that a “fully dressed” use case is not always appropriate. This is why use cases are best written by business experts. In order to write good use cases you must have a very clear idea about functionality you need. We found a page from GatherSpace.com with an article about writing effective use case, containing what I think is 10 good steps on writing good and effective use cases. He early on describes a couple of ways to write use cases. Below is a use case based on his “Casual Use Case” structure. Amazon link to the book I mentioned: Writing Effective Use Cases by Alistair Cockburn http://www.amazon.com/Writing-Effective-Cases-Software-Development/dp/0201702258/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1198563112&sr=8-1. I began the journey of use cases through Alistair Cockburn book today and one thing hit me right away. A nice reference sheet can be found at Alistair's website.