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Software Engineering [Hardcover]

Shari Lawrence Pfleeger , Joanne M. Atlee

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Software Engineering: Theory and Practice (4th Edition) Software Engineering: Theory and Practice (4th Edition)
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Book Description

July 24 2005 0131469134 978-0131469136 3
This introduction to software engineering and practice addresses both procedural and object-oriented development. Is thoroughly updated to reflect significant changes in software engineering, including modeling and agile methods. Emphasizes essential role of modeling design in software engineering. Applies concepts consistently to two common examples – a typical information system and a real-time system. Combines theory with real, practical applications by providing an abundance of case studies and examples from the current literature. A useful reference for software engineers.

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From the Back Cover

This introduction to software engineering and practice addresses both procedural and object-oriented development. Is thoroughly updated to reflect significant changes in software engineering, including modeling and agile methods. Emphasizes essential role of modeling design in software engineering. Applies concepts consistently to two common examples – a typical information system and a real-time system. Combines theory with real, practical applications by providing an abundance of case studies and examples from the current literature. A useful reference for software engineers.

About the Author

Shari Lawrence Pfleeger (Ph.D., Information Technology and Engineering, George Mason University; M.S., Planning, The Pennsylvania State University; M.A., Mathematics, The Pennsylvania State University; B.A., Mathematics with high honors, Harpur College, Binghamton, NY) is a senior researcher at RAND’s Arlington, VA office where she helps organizations and government agencies understand whether and how information technology supports their mission and goals.  Dr. Pfleeger began her career as a mathematician and then a software developer and maintainer for real-time, business-critical software systems. From 1982 to 2002, Dr. Pfleeger was president of Systems/Software, Inc., a consultancy specializing in software engineering and technology. From 1997 to 2000, she was also a visiting professor at the University of Maryland's computer science department. In the past, she was founder and director of Howard University's Center for Research in Evaluating Software Technology (CREST), and was a visiting scientist at the City University (London) Centre for Software Reliability, principal scientist at MITRE Corporation's Software Engineering Center, and manager of the measurement program at the Contel Technology Center (named by the Software Engineering Institute as one of the best such programs in the country). Dr. Pfleeger is well-known for her work in software quality, software assurance, and empirical studies of software engineering; she is particularly known for her multi-disciplinary approach to solving information technology problems.

 

She is also well-known for her publications, many of which are required reading in software engineering curricula, including "Software Engineering: Theory and Practice" (3rd edition, with Joanne Atlee, 2005, Prentice Hall), "Security in Computing" (3rd edition, with Charles P. Pfleeger, 2003, Prentice Hall), "Solid Software" (2001, with Les Hatton and Charles Howell, Prentice Hall), and "Software Metrics:  A Rigorous and Practical Approach" (2nd edition, with Norman Fention, 1996, Boyd and Fraser Publishers).  Dr. Pfleeger is book review editor for IEEE Security and Privacy. For several years, she was the associate editor-in-chief of IEEE Software, where she edited the Quality Time column, and then associate editor of IEEE Transactions on Software Engineering. From 1998 to 2002, she was a member of the editorial board of Prentice Hall's Software Quality Institute series. She is a senior member of IEEE, the IEEE Computer Society, and the Association for Computing Machinery.

 

Joanne M. Atlee is an Associate Professor in the School of Computer Science at the University of Waterloo. Her research program focuses on software modeling, documentation, and analysis, with a particular emphasis on what she calls practical formalisms:  specification and design notations that are practitioner-friendly but have a precise semantics suitable for automated analysis.  More recently, she has been working on configurable model-driven development, whereby modeling notations, analysis tools, and code generators can be configured via semantics parameters.

 

Atlee was the founding Director of Waterloo’s Software Engineering degree program. She served on the Steering Committee for the Computing Curricula Software Engineering volume, co-sponsored by IEEE-CS and ACM.  She is the vice chair of the International Federation for Information Processing (IFIP) Working Group 2.9 on software requirements engineering.  Atlee was the program-committee chair for the International Conference on Requirements Engineering in 2005 (RE'05), and will be co-chair of the program committee for the International Conference on Software Engineering in 2009 (ICSE'09).  She is a co-author with Shari Lawrence Pfleeger on the textbook "Software Engineering - Theory and Practice."


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Amazon.com: 2.8 out of 5 stars  4 reviews
12 of 14 people found the following review helpful
1.0 out of 5 stars Not a good choice Mar 5 2008
By Fred Swartz - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
This is a dry, historically oriented, compendium of software engineering issues. A much more readable, and very practical, introduction is McConnell's "Rapid Development" (1996) which seems much more up to date than Pfleeger's book. Read "Rapid Development" first whatever else you do. Next read one of the "Agile" intro books by Larman or Cockburn (or others). Then you'll know which of Pfleeger's topics have relevance to today's software world.

Pfleeger's only acknowledgment of the "agile" development revolution of the last eight years is four pages!
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Decent Work Dec 31 2008
By Siddhardha - Published on Amazon.com
Amazon Verified Purchase
This book was a required text for a graduate course in Software Engineering that I had taken. We covered about 2/3rd's of the text in class. The authors have done a pretty good job of presenting various concepts and I liked this book for the most part. In some places, the diagrams presented are very confusing (especially in design related chapters such as chapter 6 Considering Objects) since the notation used deviates from the standard UML. While I had to do a class project for the course that included design and implementation, I supplemented this book with Applying UML and Patterns by Craig Larman, which does an excellent job in presentation of UML for software design. I will recommend this book to novices to intermediate level readers in this arena. Note that this book does not cover concurrency (but only stand alone applications), so our professor used another book - Concurrency State Models and Java Programs by Jeff Magee and Jeff Kramer - for this purpose. These two books together will give an interested reader a pretty good introduction to the software engineering field.
6 of 10 people found the following review helpful
1.0 out of 5 stars Only syntactically correct. Nov 9 2008
By Y. Chen - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
Many sections of this book can be renamed to: "Random Words Put Together To Sound Like Sentences".

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