Difference between revisions of "Structure (glossary)"

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''<blockquote>A comprehensive, integrated plan that identifies the acquisition approach and describes the business, technical, and support strategies that management will follow to manage program risks and meet program objectives. The Acquisition Strategy should define the relationship between the acquisition phases and work efforts, and key program events such as decision points, reviews, contract awards, test activities, production lot/delivery quantities, and operational deployment objectives. (DAU February 19, 2010)</blockquote>''
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<blockquote>(1) ''(architectural structure) A physical or logical layout of the components of a system design and their internal and external connections.'' (ISO/IEC 2009, 1) </blockquote>
  
====Source====
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<blockquote>(2) ''(Data structure) a physical or logical relationship among data elements, designed to support specific data manipulation functions.'' (ISO/IEC 2009, 1) </blockquote>
DAU. February 19, 2010. ''Defense Acquisition Guidebook (DAG)''. Ft. Belvoir, VA, USA: Defense Acquisition University (DAU)/U.S. Department of Defense (DoD).  
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<blockquote>(3) ''(Generalization structure) a connection between a superclass and one of its more specific, immediate subclasses.'' (IEEE 1320.2-1998)</blockquote>
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<blockquote>(4) ''The static existence of the system; namely its elements and their relationships.'' (Created for SEBoK)</blockquote>
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===Source===
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(1) and (2) ISO/IEC. 2009. ''Systems and Software Engineering Vocabulary (SEVocab)'' - ISO/IEC 24765. in International Organization for Standardization (ISO)/International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) [database online]. Geneva, Switzerland, 2009 [cited December 21 2009]. Available from http://pascal.computer.org/sev_display/index.action.
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(3) IEEE. 1998. ''IEEE Standard for Application and Management of the Systems Engineering Process''. Washington, DC: Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), IEEE 1220-1998.
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(4) This definition developed for the SEBoK.
  
 
===Discussion===
 
===Discussion===
Discussion as to why this is the "consensus" definition for the SEBoK.
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None.
  
 
[[Category:Glossary of Terms]]
 
[[Category:Glossary of Terms]]
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<center>'''SEBoK v. 2.4, released 19 May 2021'''</center>

Revision as of 08:00, 19 May 2021

(1) (architectural structure) A physical or logical layout of the components of a system design and their internal and external connections. (ISO/IEC 2009, 1)

(2) (Data structure) a physical or logical relationship among data elements, designed to support specific data manipulation functions. (ISO/IEC 2009, 1)

(3) (Generalization structure) a connection between a superclass and one of its more specific, immediate subclasses. (IEEE 1320.2-1998)

(4) The static existence of the system; namely its elements and their relationships. (Created for SEBoK)

Source

(1) and (2) ISO/IEC. 2009. Systems and Software Engineering Vocabulary (SEVocab) - ISO/IEC 24765. in International Organization for Standardization (ISO)/International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) [database online]. Geneva, Switzerland, 2009 [cited December 21 2009]. Available from http://pascal.computer.org/sev_display/index.action.

(3) IEEE. 1998. IEEE Standard for Application and Management of the Systems Engineering Process. Washington, DC: Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), IEEE 1220-1998.

(4) This definition developed for the SEBoK.

Discussion

None.

SEBoK v. 2.4, released 19 May 2021