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Waterfall model

From open-encyclopedia.com - the free encyclopedia.

The waterfall model is a software development model first proposed in 1970 by W. W. Royce, in which development is seen as flowing steadily through the phases of requirements analysis, design, implementation, testing (validation), integration, and maintenance.

In the original article, Royce advocated using the model repeatedly, in an iterative way. However, most people do not know that and some have discredited for use as a Real World process. In practice, the process rarely proceeds in a purely linear fashion. Iterations, by going back to or adapting results of the precedent stage, are common.

Contents

Advantages

  • Good progress tracking due to clear development stages.
  • Milestones and deliverables can be clearly identified.

Disadvantages

  • Inflexible partitioning of the project into distinct stages makes it difficult to respond to changing customer requirements.

See also

References

This article was originally based on material from the Free On-line Dictionary of Computing, which is used under the GFDL.

External links


de:Wasserfallmodell

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