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Informationen zum Autor Prof. Zhi Jin is a full professor at Peking University. Her research interests include knowledge-based requirements engineering. She has published more than 100 papers in refereed journals and conferences in knowledge engineering and requirements engineering and related topics. She is a published author having written two books; Domain Modeling-Based Software Engineering: A Formal Approach (ISBN: 0-7923-7889-X, Kluwer Academic Publishers) and a computer science textbook in Chinese published by Science Press. She has years of working experience in ontology engineering, knowledge-based requirements engineering, and service-oriented modelling Klappentext Environment Modeling-Based Requirements Engineering for Software Intensive Systems provides a new and promising approach for engineering the requirements of software-intensive systems; Environment Modelling Requirements Engineering. . . Environment Modeling-Based Requirements Engineering for Software Intensive Systems presents a systematic, promising approach to identifying, clarifying, modelling, deriving, and validating the requirements of software-intensive systems from well-modelled environment simulations, while giving a new view of software capability, i.e. the effect-based software capability in terms of environment modelling. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1. Preface2. Requirements Engineering: State of Art3. Software Intensive Systems and the Challenges to Requirements Engineering4. Principles, Conceptual Framework and Process5. Environment Modelling and System Requirements Identification6. Software Functionality Identification and Specification7. Environment Related Non-functional Properties Analysis8. Concern about Self-adaptation9. Conclusion10. Index
List of contents
1. Preface2. Requirements Engineering: State of Art3. Software Intensive Systems and the Challenges to Requirements Engineering4. Principles, Conceptual Framework and Process5. Environment Modelling and System Requirements Identification6. Software Functionality Identification and Specification7. Environment Related Non-functional Properties Analysis8. Concern about Self-adaptation9. Conclusion10. Index