What is Use Case Modeling?

What is Use Case Modeling?

Use cases are often graphical, and use case diagrams are supported by text descriptions, including use case and participant descriptions, as well as scenarios associated with use case templates that make use case methods simple and intuitive and ideal tools for discussing and clarifying developers’ understanding of user needs.

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How to prioritize product Backlog in Scrum using a 100-point approach?

How to prioritize product Backlog in Scrum using a 100-point approach?

It’s important to prioritize your product backlog to make sure it doesn’t become an open-ended list where everyone has random ideas about your product. Your to-do list needs to be structured, organized, and prioritized to identify the most strategically important things for your team to do. In this article, I introduce the 100 Points method for product backlog refinement activities.

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Overview of Software Development Lifecycle (SDLC)

Overview of Software Development Lifecycle (SDLC)

In software engineering, the software development lifecycle is the process of dividing the software development effort into smaller, parallel or continuous steps or sub-processes to improve design, product management. This approach may include predefined specific deliverables and artifacts that the project team creates and completes for the development or maintenance of the software applications.

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A simple guide to use case analysis

A simple guide to use case analysis

Use case modeling is a technique for capturing, modeling, and specifying system requirements that correspond to a set of behaviors that the system may perform when interacting with actors. These behaviors produce observable results and help achieve their goals. Use cases are named for the specific user goals of the principal actors, which in turn describe or explain the general order of activities and events, as well as variations in special conditions, exceptions, or error conditions, through textual description.

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Scrum: A Quick Introduction

Scrum: A Quick Introduction

Scrum compares a software development team to a football team. It has a clear and highest goal, is familiar with the best model and technology required in the development process, has a high degree of autonomy, close communication and cooperation, and ensures to solve various challenges every day with a high degree of flexibility; Each stage has a clear progress towards the goal.

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How to Manage Product Backlog with DEEP Principles?

How to Manage Product Backlog with DEEP Principles?

The product backlog lists all the features, functions, requirements, enhancements, and fixes required for the product releases. Product backlog projects have the attributes of description (appropriately Detailed), story points (Estimates), and orders (Prioritized). They must be continuously added, deleted, and updated (Emergent) in the backlog, and reflect the understanding of the team backlog in a timely and appropriate manner .

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