Object Oriented Analysis & Design Object Oriented Analysis & Design

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Object Oriented Analysis & Design

Object Oriented Analysis & Design

SUMMITED TO: DR. NAVEED AHMAD


Submitted by: M . Shahid
ROLL NO: MIT 19 -244
Assignment: 4
Q. 1 List down Logging features? 
ANSWER:

Business cases are composed of activities (sometimes referred


to as functions or working steps or tasks) which can be further
decomposed into subactivities. Activities within an office
environment need information as input. That input has to be
provided by an information producer. Activities also produce an
output which will be delivered to the customer, probably the
most important player within a business process. Activities
have to be carried out by roles.
Logging Features:
* The features of a good documentation are −
* Concise and at the same time, unambiguous, consistent, and
complete
* Traceable to the system’s requirement specifications
* Well-structured
* Diagrammatic instead of descriptive. 1

Question # 2:
Conducting Business features? 
ANSWER:

Business cases are composed of activities (sometimes referred


to as functions or working steps or tasks) which can be further
decomposed into subactivities.  Conducting Features:
* Abstraction (abstract).
* Package (encapsulation).
* Inheritance, generalization, generalized relationships     
(inheritance, generalization).
* Polymorphic (polymorphism).
* Virtual methods and methods overrides.
* Association (Association).
* Aggregation, aggregation (aggregation).
* Combination (composition).
* Dependency (Dependency).
* Implementation (Realization).
* Cohesion and coupling (cohesion&coupling).
Question # 3:
Analyzing Business features?
ANSWER:

We expect other application-area and computation-paradigm


specific methodologies to emerge in time for other application
areas and computation paradigms. We envision analysis-design
methodologies for numeric-intensive programs running on
parallel architectures, computer games with involved user-
interface components, embedded real-time systems, robot
controllers, secure systems where certain risks need to be
minimized, verifiably correct systems and the like.
Analyzing Features.
* Static Analysis:
The (invisible) actors of the system are the registrar's office
personnel. They process
data from the other active elements, i.e. students and teachers,
and feed the system with that data.
* Dynamic Analysis:
Dynamic analysis reveals the behavior of individual objects in
the system from their own point of view. This is accomplished
through state transition diagrams, or by direct activation of
methods inside objects and classes by events.
Question # 4:
Discussion?
ANSWER:
Discussion:
Business Process Management Systems (BPMSs) are software
platforms that support the definition, execution, and tracking of
business processes. BPMSs have the ability of logging
information about the business processes they support. Proper
analysis of BPMS execution logs can yield important knowledge
and help organizations improve the quality of their business
processes and services to their business partners. This paper
presents a set of integrated tools that supports business and IT
users in managing process execution quality by providing
several features, such as analysis, prediction, monitoring,
control, and optimization. We refer to this set of tools as the
Business Process Intelligence (BPI) tool suite. Experimental
results presented in this paper are very encouraging. We plan
to investigate further enhancements on the BPI tools suite,
including automated exception prevention, and refinement of
process data preparation stage, as well as integrating other
data mining techniques.
                       

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