Black-box testing, white-box testing, unit testing, and integration testing frameworks. 5. Managing Software Projects
These slides are adapted from "Software Engineering: A Practitioner's Approach, 6/e" by Roger S. Pressman, © 1996, 2001, 2005 R.S. Pressman & Associates, Inc. Used under fair use for educational purposes.
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The 6th edition was pivotal because it bridged the gap between traditional "Waterfall" methods and the then-emerging "Agile" philosophies. It introduced many developers to the concept of the , emphasizing that high-quality code is a result of a high-quality process. Key Themes Covered in the Slides
The 6th edition PPTs are notorious for having specific diagrams that appear verbatim in exams. Pay special attention to: Pressman, © 1996, 2001, 2005 R
: They clearly define five generic framework activities— Communication, Planning, Modeling, Construction, and Deployment —alongside crucial "Umbrella Activities" like Software Quality Assurance (SQA) and Risk Management.
If you are downloading or creating slides based on this text, ensure they include these critical visual aids from the book: This public link is valid for 7 days
Engineering cannot succeed without project management. This block of PPTs targets the business and organizational side of code creation: People, Product, Process, and Project.
Some reviewers find the "fictional conversations" between characters (Doug, Vinod, and Jamie) used in the sidebars to be distracting or unprofessional for a technical text.
The presentation materials are supported by extensive checklists and over 700 categorized web references for deeper research. Areas for Improvement (Critiques)