On the application of stratification to requirement specifications

Author(s):  
D. Cooke ◽  
A. Gates
INOVA-TIF ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 32
Author(s):  
Fahmi Alamsyah

<pre>Padang Restaurant (RM) or Warung Padang or Padang Restaurant is a food stall / restaurant / restaurant business that sells or serves a variety of Minangkabau culinary or cuisine originating from West Sumatra. With high mobility and technological advancements in this era will encourage people to want easy things in realizing their needs, one is looking for a Padang-eating house. Therefore, this research was built to create a Mobilegis-based Padang restaurant application using the location based service method and formula haversine formula that aims to facilitate Android smartphone users in finding and choosing the nearest Padang restaurant from the user's position and according to their choice. The system design used is the adaptive model method which includes the process activity phase which consists of scope, design, build, test and check presented in separate stages such as requirement specifications, software design, implementation, testing, etc. In the application the user is facilitated with there is a route feature that will guide to the Padang restaurant that has been previously selected. Conclusion What was obtained from this study was the result of the distribution of the Padang restaurant in the city of Bogor, the results of the analysis for calculating the distance of the nearest Padang restaurant using haversine. The results of the implementation of the distribution of Padang restaurants in the city of Bogor based on mobilegis.</pre>


2014 ◽  
Vol 08 (01) ◽  
pp. 47-65 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel Ott ◽  
Frank Houdek

Current Requirement Engineering research must face the need to deal with the increasing scale of today's requirement specifications. One important and recent research direction is handling the consistency assurance between large scale specifications and many additional regulations (e.g. national and international norms and standards), which the specifications must consider or satisfy. For example, the specification volume for a single electronic control unit (ECU) in the automotive domain sums up to 3000 to 5000 pages distributed over 30 to 300 individual documents (specification and regulations). In this work, we present an approach to automatically classify the requirements in a set of specification documents and regulations to content topics in order to improve review activities in identifying cross-document inconsistencies. An essential success criteria for this approach from an industrial perspective is a sufficient classification quality with minimal manual effort. In this paper, we show the results of an evaluation in the domain of automotive specifications at Mercedes-Benz passenger cars. The results show that one manually classified specification is sufficient to derive automatic classifications for other documents within this domain with satisfactory recall and precision. So, the approach of using content topics is not only effective but also efficient in large scale industrial environments.


Author(s):  
Fredrik Elgh ◽  
Staffan Sunnersjö

Many companies base their business strategy on customized products with a high level of variety and continuous functional improvements. For companies to be able to provide affordable products in a short time and be at the competitive edge, every new design must be adapted to existing production facilities. In order to ensure this, collaboration between engineering design and production engineering has to be supported. With the dispersed organisations of today combined with the increasing amount of information that has to be shared and managed, this collaboration is a critical issue for many companies. In this article, an approach for sharing and managing product and production information is introduced. The results are based on the experiences from a case study at a car manufacturer. By ontology-based integration, work within domains engineering design, production engineering and requirement management at the company was integrated. The main objectives with the integration were: support the formation of requirement specifications for products and processes, improve and simplify the information retrieval for designers and process planners, ensure traceability from changes in product systems to manufacturing systems and vice versa, and finally, eliminate redundant or multiple versions of requirement specifications.


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