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New Post 4/22/2011 7:37 PM
User is offline johnjohn123
9 posts
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the level of details when writting a use case document 
Modified By johnjohn123  on 4/22/2011 9:41:40 PM)

i am writting a use case document , where each use case contains the following section; title, use case description,pre-condition, etc.

so should i specify in the use case description what the fields that the use should fill , for example

1. the user click on the create link

2.the user fill the first name field, second name fields, etc

or the use case should not specify such details?

thanks

 
New Post 4/23/2011 12:48 AM
User is offline Kimbo
454 posts
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Re: the level of details when writting a use case document 

 Hi John,

Use cases are solution independent. So you are wrong to use them to specify a screen. That is solution. There is a many to many relationship between use cases and screens. A use case defines a function. That function may be realised by a manual process or a screen or many screens. Similarly, a screen may realise more than one use case. They are not design tools.

If you want to define a screen, do something like a prototype and define all the possible actions that can be taken on the screen and what all the controls on the screen are. A use case is not the way to describe that.

Kimbo

 

 
New Post 4/23/2011 8:01 AM
User is offline johnjohn123
9 posts
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Re: the level of details when writting a use case document 

Thanks a lot for your help; but what should i use to build  the prototype?.

 
New Post 4/24/2011 3:03 PM
User is offline Kimbo
454 posts
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Re: the level of details when writting a use case document 

 Hi John,

There are lots of different ways to do it including:

1. Paper - do a simple sketch. Good for a broad brush start but if you want to show detail, it is more time consuming and much harder to change

2. HTML - get a hold of dreamweaver or MS Page and build it that way

3. Use a drawing tool. MS Visio will do it or better still something like Balsamiq which has predefined controls (http://balsamiq.com/). Not sure but I think balsamiq generates HTML when you're finished. Visio is just a small step above paper.

4. Work with a developer to build a quick and "dirty-ish" version of your screen. If you have the time, this is best cause you have a working screen at the end that just needs to be fixed up to a production level.

Suggest you also create a site map showing actions taken and transitions between screens. I use a UML state diagram to do that.

Kimbo

 
New Post 4/26/2011 8:58 AM
User is offline spoonertech
8 posts
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Re: the level of details when writting a use case document 

 liddelk wrote
 

3. Use a drawing tool. MS Visio will do it or better still something like Balsamiq which has predefined controls (http://balsamiq.com/). Not sure but I think balsamiq generates HTML when you're finished. Visio is just a small step above paper.

Suggest you also create a site map showing actions taken and transitions between screens. I use a UML state diagram to do that.

Thanks for the tip on Balsamiq, I had not used that program before but will check it out. Do you also use it to create your UML state diagrams? I had used Visio for most of my mockups in the past.


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