Difference between revisions of "Software engineering"
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== Description == | == Description == | ||
− | The Bureau of Labor Statistics' definition is "Research, design, develop, and [[Software testing|test]] operating systems-level software, compilers, and network distribution software for medical, industrial, military, communications, aerospace, business, scientific, and general computing applications." | + | The Bureau of Labor Statistics' definition is "Research, design, develop, and [[Software testing|test]] operating systems-level software, [[Compiler|compilers]], and network distribution software for medical, industrial, military, communications, aerospace, business, scientific, and general computing applications." |
== Definitions == | == Definitions == |
Revision as of 05:07, 9 February 2016
Software engineering is the study and an application of engineering to the design, development, and maintenance of software.
Description
The Bureau of Labor Statistics' definition is "Research, design, develop, and test operating systems-level software, compilers, and network distribution software for medical, industrial, military, communications, aerospace, business, scientific, and general computing applications."
Definitions
Typical formal definitions of software engineering are:
- "The application of a systematic, disciplined, quantifiable approach to the development, operation, and maintenance of software"
- "An engineering discipline that is concerned with all aspects of software production"
- "The establishment and use of sound engineering principles in order to economically obtain software that is reliable and works efficiently on real machines."
See also
- Artifact (software development)
- Computer science
- Design by contract
- Electrical engineering
- Engineering
- Quality control
- Software architecture
- Software defect
- Software design
- Software development
- Software development process
- Software requirements
- Software testing
- Syntax (programming languages)
External links
- Software engineering @ Wikipedia