What is OOAD?
Object-oriented analysis and design
(OOAD) is a software engineering approach that models a
system as a group of interacting objects. Each object represents some entity of
interest in the system being modeled, and is characterised by its class, its state
(data elements), and its behavior.
Various
models can be created to show the static structure, dynamic behavior, and
run-time deployment of these collaborating objects. There are a number of
different notations for representing these models, such as the Unified Modeling
Language (UML).
Object-oriented
analysis (OOA) applies object-modelling techniques to analyze the functional
requirements for a system. Object-oriented design (OOD) elaborates the analysis
models to produce implementation specifications. OOA focuses on what the system
does, OOD on how the system does it
Object-oriented
systems
An
object-oriented system is composed of objects. The behavior of the system
results from the collaboration of those objects. Collaboration between objects
involves them sending messages to each other. Sending a message differs from
calling a function in that when a target object receives a message, it itself
decides what function to carry out to service that message. The same message
may be implemented by many different functions, the one selected depending on
the state of the target object.
The
implementation of "message sending" varies depending on the
architecture of the system being modeled, and the location of the objects being
communicated with.
Object-oriented
analysis
Object-oriented
analysis (OOA) looks at the problem domain, with the aim of producing a
conceptual model of the information that exists in the area being analyzed.
Analysis models do not consider any implementation constraints that might
exist, such as concurrency, distribution, persistence, or how the system is to
be built. Implementation constraints are dealt during object-oriented design
(OOD). Analysis is done before the Design[citation needed].
The
sources for the analysis can be a written requirements statement, a formal
vision document, interviews with stakeholders or other interested parties. A
system may be divided into multiple domains, representing different business,
technological, or other areas of interest, each of which are analyzed
separately.
The
result of object-oriented analysis is a description of what the system is
functionally required to do, in the form of a conceptual model. That will
typically be presented as a set of use cases, one or more UML class diagrams,
and a number of interaction diagrams. It may also include some kind of user
interface mock-up. The purpose of object oriented analysis is to develop a
model that describes computer software as it works to satisfy a set of customer
defined requirements.
Object-oriented
design
Object-oriented
design (OOD) transforms the conceptual model produced in object-oriented
analysis to take account of the constraints imposed by the chosen architecture
and any non-functional – technological or environmental – constraints, such as
transaction throughput, response time, run-time platform, development
environment, or programming language.
The
concepts in the analysis model are mapped onto implementation classes and
interfaces. The result is a model of the solution domain, a detailed
description of how the system is to be built
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