Freelance
sabbagh
sabbagh at acf5.NYU.EDU
Fri Oct 6 00:28:31 AEST 1989
In article <207600048 at s.cs.uiuc.edu> mccaugh at s.cs.uiuc.edu writes:
>
> Secondly - and more important for your own protection - is to ensure that
> you get ACCURATE specifications for a job PRIOR to programming, and I mean:
> IN WRITING. In my own experience and most of my colleagues, that has proved
> to be the main problem in getting tasks done to everyone's satisfaction.
Better still: WORK WITH THE CONTRACTOR to generate written specifications.
This will increase your value to the contractor and make you more desirable,
since most consultants are good at programming and lousy at systems analysis.
The best way to learn systems analysis is by experience. Yourdon's books
on the subject give a good introduction, but his "structured" analysis
pays for itself only in large organizations. Draw some DFDs, build a
data dictionary but don't take the whole structured analysis thing too
seriously unless you are looking at a project involving 1+ man-years
(person-years?).
>From my experience, systems analysis and design are at least as fun
as actual programming and make the code-writing part easier. With the
more rigorous development cycle I am suggesting, you don't really
add to the number of design decisions to be made, you just make them
in a different order. That's what top-down design is all about.
Hadil G. Sabbagh
E-mail: sabbagh at csd27.nyu.edu
Voice: (212) 998-3285
Snail: Courant Institute of Math. Sci.
251 Mercer St.
New York,NY 10012
186,282 miles per second -- it's not just a good idea, it's the law!
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