GeekArticles
Testing
Testing BasicsRequirement or Specification?
Author: web.archive.org |
Published: 12th Aug 2005 |
Visited: 270 times |
Add CommentFiled in: Testing BasicsThe difference between a requirement and a specification is basically one of what and how. The requirements define what is going to be done and what is going to be done usually means necessary objectives that the organization feels will be beneficial to the end-users as well as to the revenue of the organization itself.
Read Article Sponsored Links
Related Articles
• The W3C's new SEX 1.0 specification As we approach the atomic limit of silicon, and hence the upper bounds of Moore's Law, our insatiable appetite for computing power and petabyte-scale applications will be increasingly met by a horizontal scaling of computer power: ever-larger server-farms. The platform ...
• Unified C# 3.0 Specification Now Available The authoritative C# 3.0 Specification was written by the people who created and implemented the C# language. This 500 plus page document is now available for downl ...
• XML Paper Specification (XPS) to be Standardized You know, there was a time in the not-too-distant past where an effort to standardize something Microsoft created was seen as a *GOOD* thing, ECMA to create standard out of Microsoft rival to PDF July 01, 2007 (IDG News Service ...
• XML Paper Specification (XPS) of a Word 2003 Document Microsoft opened an XML Window to its office products through its royalty-free, cross-platform, open standard XPS specification. This article describes the details of converting a Word 2003 document that complies with ...
• Updated Specification on WS-Federation Customer feedback has driven new updates to WS-Federation. Learn about features such as federation metadata, pseudonym management, authorization and privacy, and updated references to related specificati ...