Rational unified process - Wikipedia RUP is not a single concrete prescriptive process, but rather an adaptable process framework, intended to be tailored by the development organizations and software project teams that will select the elements of the process that are appropriate for their needs
What is RUP (Rational Unified Process) and its Phases? Rational Unified Process (RUP) is a framework for software engineering processes RUP is an Iterative and incremental approach to improving problem knowledge through consecutive revisions It is an architecture-centric and use-case-driven approach that manages risk and is flexible to change
Tutorial: Rational Unified Process guidance - IBM The Rational Unified Process (RUP) provides you with guidelines and tools so that you can apply industry-standard best practices to your software engineering projects
Rational Unified Process (RUP): Definition, Methodology, and Benefits RUP is based on a set of principles, such as being iterative, architecture-centric, use-case-driven, risk-driven, and collaborative It is divided into four key phases: Inception, Elaboration, Construction, and Transition, each with specific objectives, deliverables, and milestones
Rational Unified Process - FourWeekMBA Rational unified process (RUP) is an agile software development methodology that breaks the project life cycle down into four distinct phases
Rational Unified Process - an overview | ScienceDirect Topics RUP is an increasingly popular approach to developing software systems, and is already laying claim to be the industry standard However, it would be overkill to work through all the details of RUP in this book, since the book is based around the development of a small, simple information system
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Rational Unified Process - ActiveCollab RUP started out as a small manageable process framework, that will later on become one of the building blocks and best frameworks for building software It was initially created by the Rational Software Corporation, which IBM bought out in 2003