July 2001
Intermediate to advanced
656 pages
15h 51m
English
The idea of use cases to describe functional requirements was introduced in 1986 by Ivar Jacobson [Jacobson92], a main contributor to the UML and UP. Jacobson's use case idea was seminal and widely appreciated; simplicity and utility being its chief virtues. Although many have made contributions to the subject, arguably the most influential, comprehensive, and coherent next step in defining what use cases are (or should be) and how to write them came from Alistair Cockburn, summarized in the very popular text Writing Effective Use Cases [Cockburn01], based on his earlier work and writings stemming from 1992 onwards. This introduction is therefore based upon and consistent with the latter work.
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