Conceptualizing Requirements Using User Stories and Use Cases: A Controlled Experiment

Author(s):  
Fabiano Dalpiaz ◽  
Arnon Sturm
2019 ◽  
Vol 38 (1) ◽  
pp. 5-7
Author(s):  
Kevin M Ford

User stories and use cases help focus any development project on those who stand to benefit, i.e. the project’s stakeholders, and can guard simultaneously against insufficient planning and software bloat. And the concepts, though most often thought of with respect to large-scale projects, apply in all circumstances, from the smallest feature request to an existing system to the redesign of a complex system.


Author(s):  
Pankaj Kamthan ◽  
Terrill Fancott

There are a number of concerns in agile software development, including requirements engineering. There are different types of agile requirement, of which currently the most common forms are use cases and user stories. The use cases and user stories have different origins, both in space and in time, but, by being among the practices of scenario-oriented requirements engineering (SORE), they are not entirely unrelated. The purpose of this article is to situate use cases and user stories in context of each other. This is done by means of a conceptual framework for systematically comparing use cases and user stories. The understanding of similarities and differences between use cases and user stories have pedagogical as well as practical implications.


Author(s):  
Pankaj Kamthan ◽  
Terrill Fancott

There are a number of concerns in agile software development, including requirements engineering. There are different types of agile requirement, of which currently the most common forms are use cases and user stories. The use cases and user stories have different origins, both in space and in time, but by being among the practices of scenario-oriented requirements engineering (SORE), they are not entirely unrelated. The purpose of this chapter is to situate use cases and user stories in the context of each other. This is done by means of a conceptual framework for systematically comparing use cases and user stories. The understanding of similarities and differences between use cases and user stories have pedagogical as well as practical implications.


2009 ◽  
Author(s):  
Simmone Dyrness ◽  
Albert Dyrness

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