Functional Decomposition

Functional decomposition of engineering is a method for analyzing engineered systems. The basic idea is to try to divide a system in such a way that each block of the block diagram can be described without an "and" or "or" in the description. This exercise forces each part of the system to have a pure function. When a system is composed of pure functions, they can be reused, or replaced. A usual side-effect is that the interfaces between blocks become simple and generic. Since the interfaces usually become simple, it is easier to replace a pure function with a related, similar function. For example, say that one needs to make a stereo system. One might functionally decompose this into speakers, amplifier, a tape deck and a front panel. Later, when a different model needs an audio CD, it can probably fit the same interfaces. This process is powerful when applied to software engineering.

See also

* Functional decomposition of mind

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
gun
fred reed
fred brooks
factoid
figured bass
fashion
fourier transform
fat man
false claims act
u.s. false claims law (in depth)
fantastic four
filtration
follies
functional grammar
fick's law of diffusion
far east
fawlty towers
false friend
false cognate
fall (disambiguation)
feudal society
fergus mcduck
fundamental analysis
frasier
fethry duck
fantasy games unlimited
first international bahai council
five good emperors
fossils and the geological timescale
franz boas
franz bopp
full metal jacket
flirting
franklin schaffner
fungimol
freeway
folk etymology
finch
facilitated diffusion
f 15 eagle
f 14 tomcat
f 117 nighthawk
f4u corsair
freddy heineken