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Type | Conference or Workshop Paper |
Scope | Discipline-based scholarship |
Published in Proceedings | Yes |
Title | Rethinking the Notion of Non-Functional Requirements |
Organization Unit | |
Authors |
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Presentation Type | paper |
Item Subtype | Original Work |
Refereed | Yes |
Status | Published in final form |
Page Range | 55 - 64 |
Event Title | Third World Congress for Software Quality |
Event Type | conference |
Event Location | Munich, Germany |
Event Start Date | September 26 - 2005 |
Event End Date | September 30 - 2005 |
Abstract Text | Requirements standards and textbooks typically classify requirements into functional requirements on the one hand and attributes or non-functional requirements on the other hand. In this classification, requirements given in terms of required operations and/or data are considered to be functional, while performance requirements and quality requirements (such as requirements about security, reliability, maintainability, etc.) are classified as nonfunctional. In this paper, we present arguments why this notion of non-functional requirements is flawed and present a new classification of requirements which is based on four facets: kind (e.g. function, performance, or constraint), representation (e.g. operational, quantitative or qualitative), satisfaction (hard or soft), and role (e.g. prescriptive or assumptive). We define the facets, discuss typical combinations of facets and argue why such a faceted classification of requirements is better than the traditional notion of functional and non-functional requirements. |
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