Tuesday, 3 November 2020

Software System Analyst

 

Software System Analyst

System analyst in an IT organization is a person, who analyzes the requirement of proposed system and ensures that requirements are conceived and documented properly & correctly. Role of an analyst starts during Software Analysis Phase of SDLC. It is the responsibility of analyst to make sure that the developed software meets the requirements of the client.

System Analysts have the following responsibilities:

  • Analyzing and understanding requirements of intended software
  • Understanding how the project will contribute in the organization objectives
  • Identify sources of requirement
  • Validation of requirement
  • Develop and implement requirement management plan
  • Documentation of business, technical, process and product requirements
  • Coordination with clients to prioritize requirements and remove and ambiguity
  • Finalizing acceptance criteria with client and other stakeholders

Thursday, 18 October 2012

JSP

server...

If you do not have a JSP capable web-server or application server, the first step is to download one.  There are many such servers available, most of which can be downloaded for free evaluation and/or development.  Some of them are:

Blazix from Desiderata Software (1.5 Megabytes, JSP, Servlets and EJBs)
TomCat from Apache (Approx 6 Megabytes)
WebLogic from BEA Systems (Approx 40 Megabytes, JSP, Servlets and EJBs)
WebSphere from IBM (Approx 100 Megabytes, JSP, Servlets and EJBs)

 

ALL DBMS PPTS

http://www.cse.iitb.ac.in/~sudarsha/db-book/slide-dir/index.html

JDBC CODE

import java.sql.*;
import javax.sql.*;

public class jdbcdemo{

public static void main(String args[]){
String dbtime;
String dbUrl = "jdbc:mysql://localhost:3306/raju";
String dbClass = "com.mysql.jdbc.Driver";
String query = "Select * FROM users";
String USER = "root";
String PASS = "";

try {

Class.forName("com.mysql.jdbc.Driver");
Connection con = DriverManager.getConnection (dbUrl,USER,PASS);
Statement stmt = con.createStatement();
ResultSet rs = stmt.executeQuery(query);

while (rs.next()) {
dbtime = rs.getString(1);
System.out.println(dbtime);
} //end while

con.close();
} //end try

catch(ClassNotFoundException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}

catch(SQLException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}

}  //end main

}  //end class

Saturday, 8 September 2012

Thursday, 6 September 2012

Wednesday, 1 August 2012

Experiment 1 solution

Q. 1 Write a sql query to create and display students table.
create table students (sid varchar(10),name varchar(20),login varchar(10),age numeric(2),gpa numeric(4,2));
Q.2Write a sql query to create and display faculty table.
create table faculty(fid varchar(10),fname varchar(20),sal numeric(8,2));
Q.3 Write a sql query to create and display courses table.
 create table courses(cid varchar(10),cname varchar(20),credits numeric(1));
Q.4 Write a sql query to create and display rooms table.
create table rooms(rno numeric(4),address varchar(20),capacity numeric(3));

Q.5  Write a sql query to create and display enrolled table.
create table enrolled(sid varchar(10),cid varchar(10),grade varchar(1) );
Q.6  Write a sql query to create and display teaches table.
create table teaches(fid varchar(10),cid varchar(10) );
Q.7 Write a sql query to create and display meet_in table.
create table meet_in(cid varchar(10),rno numeric(4),time varchar(8));
  
     Alter table add/modify/drop columns:

Q.8 write a sql query to drop a column of a table
alter table faculty drop column fname;
Q.9 write a sql query to add a column to a table
alter table faculty add fname varchar(20);
Q.10 Write a sql table to modify the columns to add null constraint.  
(EXPLANATION-A not-null constraint is always written as a column constraint. A not-null constraint is functionally equivalent to creating a check constraint CHECK (column_name IS NOT NULL), but in PostgreSQL creating an explicit not-null constraint is more efficient. The drawback is that you cannot give explicit names to not-null constraints created this way.)

alter table students ADD CONSTRAINT stud_login_nn  CHECK (login IS NOT NULL);   OR
alter table students alter column login set not null;OR
alter table students alter login set not null;

alter table faculty alter fname set  not null , alter sal set not null;   OR
alter table faculty ADD CONSTRAINT faculty_fname_nn  CHECK (fname IS NOT NULL),ADD CONSTRAINT  faculty_sal_nn  cHECK (sal IS NOT NULL);

alter table courses ADD CONSTRAINT course_cname_nn  cHECK (cname IS NOT NULL),ADD CONSTRAINT  course_credits_nn  cHECK (credits IS NOT NULL); OR
alter table courses alter cname set  not null , alter credits set not null; 

alter table rooms ADD CONSTRAINT crooms_address_nn CHECK (address IS NOT NULL),ADD CONSTRAINT  courses_capacity_nn cHECK (capacity IS NOT NULL); OR
alter table rooms alter address set  not null , alter capacity set not null;


Q.11 write a sql query to add column and table level constraints 
alter table students add constraint student_sid_pk primary key(sid), add constraint stud_login_uk unique(login);
alter table faculty add constraint faculty_fid_pk primary key(fid);
alter table courses add constraint courses_cid_pk primary key(cid);
alter table rooms add constraint rooms_rno_pk primary key(rno);
alter table enrolled add constraint enroll_grade_ck check(grade in( 'A','B','C','D'));
alter table enrolled add constraint enroll_pk primary key(sid,cid), add constraint enroll_sid_fk foreign key(sid) references  students(sid) on delete cascade,add constraint enroll_cid_fk foreign key(cid) references courses(cid);
alter table teaches add constraint teach_pk primary key(fid,cid), add constraint teach_fid_fk foreign key(fid) references faculty(fid) on delete cascade ,add constraint teach_cid_fk foreign key(cid) references courses(cid);
alter table meet_in add constraint meet_in_pk primary key(cid,rno,time), add constraint meet_in_cid_fk foreign key(cid)  references courses(cid) on delete cascade,add constraint meet_in_rno_fk foreign key(rno) references rooms(rno) on delete cascade;
(EXPLANATION-A foreign key with a cascade delete means that if a record in the parent table is deleted, then the corresponding records in the child table with automatically be deleted. This is called a cascade delete.)

ER Model to Relational Model Maping

Lecture Series on Database Management System by Dr.S.Srinath, IIIT Bangalore. For more details on NPTEL visit http://nptel.iitm.ac.in

Data Modelling - ER Diagrams, Mapping


Lecture Series on Software Engineering by Prof.N.L. Sarda, Prof. Umesh Bellur,Prof.R.K.Joshi and Prof.Shashi Kelkar, Department of Computer Science & Engineering ,IIT Bombay . For more details on NPTEL visit http://nptel.iitm.ac.in

Introduction of DBMS

Lecture Series on Database Management System by Prof.D.Janakiram, Department of Computer Science & Engineering ,IIT Madras. For more details on NPTEL visit http://nptel.iitm.ac.in

Tuesday, 31 July 2012

neural network Question bank 1

A. supervised learning, and unsupervised learning.
B. Hebbian Learning Rule 

1. what is supervised learning? with a neat diagram and an example.
2. What is unsupervised learning? with a neat diagram and an example.
3. differentiate between  supervised learning and unsupervised learning.
4. Explain  Hebbian Learning with a neat diagram and an example.


Answer (1,2,3,4)

http://www.uotechnology.edu.iq/dep-eee/lectures/4th/Electronic/Software%20&%20intelligent%20system/1.pdf

Monday, 30 July 2012

ER Model vs. Relational Model


• Both are used to model data
• ER model has many concepts
– entities, relations, attributes, etc.
– well-suited for capturing the app. requirements
– not well-suited for computer implementation
– (does not even have operations on its structures)
• Relational model
– has just a single concept: relation
– world is represented with a collection of tables
– well-suited for defining manipulations on data