Chapter Three
Chapter Three
Systems Analysis
Chapter Content:
The modern methods are additional techniques to collect information about the current
system, the organizational area requesting the new system, and what the new system should
be like: the modern methods are Joint Application Design and Prototyping.
These techniques reduce the time of collecting and structuring the requirements.
•Joint Application Design (JAD)
JAD is a means to bring together the key users, managers, and systems analysts involved in
the analysis of a current system.
The goal of JAD is to collect systems requirements simultaneously from the key people
involved in the system.
JAD sessions are usually conducted in a location away from where the people normally
work, to keep them away from all distractions , so that they can concentrate fully on
systems analysis.
Figure- A typical room layout for a JAD
session
PART II: SYSTEM ANALYSIS
Structuring Systems Requirements
Data Store
•Process
Guidelines for drawing DFDs
• Completeness: It refers to whether the DFDs
include all the components necessary for the system
you are modeling. If the DFD contains data flows
that do no lead anywhere, or data store, processes,
or external entities that are not connected to
anything else, that DFD is not complete
• Consistency: It refers to whether or not the
depiction of the system shown at one level of a
DFD is compatible with the depictions of the
system shown at other level.
Guidelines for drawing DFDs
• Timing considerations: On a given DFD,
there is no indication of whether a data flow
occurs at what time and there is also no
indication of when a system would run.
• The iterative nature of drawing DFDs:
Iterative development recognizes that
requirements determination and requirements
structuring are interaction, not sequential, sub
phases of the analysis phase of the SDLC
U sin g D a ta flo w d ia g ra m m in g in th e a n a ly si