Leap SE' 4.0 is Commercial Source Editors software design by Leap Systems. It runs on following operating system: Win 3.1x,Win95,Win98,WinME,WinNT 3.x,WinNT 4.x,WinXP,Windows2000,Windows CE and has as system requirements: Windows 98 or later; Access 97 or later; 4M disk, 60M RAM. Leap SE is a CASE tool that turns system requirements into object & data models for software development. More than a Requirements Management tool, Leap SE shortens the systems development lifecycle and accelerates rapid application development.
Whats new in version 4.0:Java object model output (.java) and browsing.
Publisher review:Leap SE is an advanced requirements engineering CASE tool that produces object-oriented models directly from a system requirements repository or specification (SRS). By translating English into logical models for software development, Leap SE achieves RAD from the source, dramatically shortening the systems analysis phase of software projects. Project managers can reduce their systems engineering staffing needs with Leap SE, while promoting the development of quality requirements. Twenty-two templates and a Requirement Builder are provided for fast and flexible composition. Every time a new requirement is saved, Leap SE's object model database is updated to reflect the new entities, relationships, attributes and methods. From this database, a directory of header files can be generated at any time to give software engineering a much-needed head start on design. Moreover, it's just one small step to importing these header files into a reverse-engineering CASE tool to quickly produce a host of class diagrams. Leap SE is fully integrated with MS Access. Data model output, in the form of SQL, can be run in the RDBMS to produce entity-relationship diagrams, tables, and relationships complete with referential integrity.
Requirements:Windows 98 or later; Access 97 or later; 4M disk, 60M RAM
Operating system:Win 3.1x,Win95,Win98,WinME,WinNT 3.x,WinNT 4.x,WinXP,Windows2000,Windows CE
Release notes:New Release
New information coming from some sources close to Apple confirming that the Cupertino giant is testing two different models of iPhone, called internal iPhone5, 1 and iPhone 5.2. Apparently, both devices have a screen of 3.95 inches and a resolution of 113
Posted on: 24 May 2012 08:36 by A. Brown