Brief Introduction
An in-depth look at use cases, actors, and use case modelingDescription
Come join us as we explore the world of use cases and use case modeling. We'll take a deep dive into this part of the UML, looking at actors, use cases, use case diagrams, flows of events, and activity diagrams. With these powerful tools at your disposal, you'll be able to create requirements artifacts that are invaluable to your team.
In this course, you’ll learn:
- What a use case is, and how to effectively use them in a project
- What an actor is, and how they can help us understand our users' perspectives
- How to find use cases and actors in your project
- How to build an effective use case diagram
- How to model reusable logic with Includes and Extends relationships
- How to model actor inheritance using Generalization relationships
- What not to do when defining or modeling use cases and actors
- How to write a use case specification, with a description, preconditions, basic and alternate flows of events, and post-conditions
- How to build an activity diagram to give you a picture of the flow
- How use cases fit into the SDLC
- What to do with non-functional requirements
And through the whole class, we’ll use real world examples and exercises to help reinforce the ideas and give you the chance to practice. In this short course, you’ll get the skills you need to start applying use cases to your projects right away.
Requirements
- Requirements
- No prerequisites - we will give you all the information you need to know
Knowledge
- A deep dive into use case modeling
- An approach and discussion consistent with UML 2.5
- A detailed understanding of use cases and actors
- The ability to find use cases and actors in your projects
- The ability to model use cases and actors on a use case diagram, using associations, include and extend relationships, and generalizations
- Knowledge to avoid pitfalls and common mistakes in use case modeling
- The ability to write a complete and effective use case specification, with both basic and alternate flows
- The ability to model the flow of events through a UML activity diagram
- An understanding of how use cases fit into the SDLC
- An understanding of how to document non-functional requirements
- A fun learning experience, complete with examples, exercises, and solutions