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Glossary
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Table of Contents
Glossary
[The introduction of the Glossary provides an overview
of the entire document. Present any information the reader might need to
understand the document in this section. This document is used to define
terminology specific to the problem domain, explaining terms that may be
unfamiliar to the reader of the use-case descriptions or other project
documents. Often, this document can be used as an informal data dictionary, capturing data
definitions so that use-case descriptions and other project documents can focus
on what the system must do with the information. This document should be saved
in a file called Glossary.]
[Specify the purpose of this Glossary.]
[A brief description of the scope of this Glossary;
what Project(s) it is associated with and anything else that is affected or
influenced by this document.]
[This subsection provides a complete list of all documents
referenced elsewhere in the Glossary. Identify each document by title,
report number (if applicable), date, and publishing organization. Specify the
sources from which the references can be obtained. This information may be
provided by reference to an appendix or to another document.]
[This subsection describes what the rest of the Glossary
contains and explains how the document is organized.]
[The terms defined here form the essential substance of the
document. They can be defined in any order desired, but generally alphabetical
order provides the greatest accessibility.]
[The definition for <aTerm> is presented here. As much
information as the reader needs to understand the concept should be presented.]
The definition for <anotherTerm> is presented here. As
much information as the reader needs to understand the concept should be
presented
[Sometimes it is useful to organize terms into groups to
improve readability. For example, if the problem domain contains terms related
to both accounting and building construction (as would be the case if we were
developing a system to manage construction projects), presenting the terms from
the two different sub-domains might prove confusing to the reader. To solve
this problem, we use groupings of terms. In presenting the grouping of terms,
provide a short description that helps the reader understand what
<aGroupofTerms> represents. Terms presented within the group should be
organized alphabetically for easy access.]
[The definition for <aGroupTerm> is presented here.
Present as much information as the reader needs to understand the concept.]
[The definition for <anotherGroupTerm> is presented
here. Present as much information as the reader needs to understand the
concept.]
[The definition for the term is presented here. Present as
much information as the reader needs to understand the concept.]
[The definition for the term is presented here. Present as
much information as the reader needs to understand the concept.]
[This section contains or references specifications of
Unified Modeling Language (UML) stereotypes and their semantic implications—a
textual description of the meaning and significance of the stereotype and any
limitations on its use—for stereotypes already known or discovered to be
important for the system being modeled. The use of these stereotypes may be
simply recommended or perhaps even made mandatory; for example, when their use
is required by an imposed standard or when it is felt that their use makes
models significantly easier to understand. This section may be empty if no
additional stereotypes, other than those predefined by the UML and the Rational
Unified Process, are considered necessary.]