August 2012
Intermediate to advanced
576 pages
16h 32m
English
in which we show how measuring requirements makes them unambiguous, understandable, communicable, and testable
Fit, as we use the term here, means a solution completely satisfies or matches the requirement. That is, the solution does exactly what the requirement says it must do or has the property the requirement says it must have—no more and no less. To test whether the solution fits the requirement, however, the requirement itself must be measurable. As a simple example, if the requirement calls for a length of rope “of a suitable size,” it is obviously impossible to test any delivered solution. By contrast, if the requirement says the rope shall be “2 centimeters in diameter and 2 meters long,” then it becomes ...