Waterfall Lifecycle (OCR A Level Computer Science)

Revision Note

Callum Davies

Expertise

Computer Science

Waterfall Lifecycle

The Waterfall Model is a sequential software development process divided into distinct phases. Each phase must be completed before the next one begins.

Steps in the model:

  1. Requirement Gathering and Analysis: All possible system requirements to be developed are captured and documented clearly

  2. System Design: The requirements are translated into a design. Architects and designers define the overall architecture and identify the main components

  3. Implementation: The actual code is written in this phase based on the design documents, turning the system design into a functional program

  4. Integration and Testing: All the components and modules are integrated and tested to ensure that the entire system works as expected

  5. Deployment: The product is released to the market or handed over to the client. It may involve installation, customization, and training

  6. Maintenance: Post-release, the system needs regular maintenance to fix bugs, improve performance, or add new features

The Waterfall Model in Software Engineering

The Waterfall Model in Software Engineering

Benefits:

  • Simple and linear: Easy to understand and follow, with each stage progressing linearly to the next

  • Clear stages and milestones: Each phase has specific deliverables and milestones, making progress easy to measure

  • Suitable for well-defined projects: Works best when the requirements are clear and unlikely to change during development

Drawbacks:

  • Inflexible: Changes are difficult to implement once the project has started, as the model doesn't easily allow for revisiting previous stages

  • Expensive to fix late problems: If a problem appears later in the development cycle, it can be costly and time-consuming to fix

  • Long development cycle: The sequential nature may lead to a longer development time, especially if stages are delayed

Suitability:

  • The Waterfall Model is most suitable for projects where requirements are well understood and unlikely to change. It works well when high quality and compliance are essential, and there is a clear understanding of the project's goals and constraints

You've read 0 of your 0 free revision notes

Get unlimited access

to absolutely everything:

  • Downloadable PDFs
  • Unlimited Revision Notes
  • Topic Questions
  • Past Papers
  • Model Answers
  • Videos (Maths and Science)

Join the 100,000+ Students that ❤️ Save My Exams

the (exam) results speak for themselves:

Did this page help you?

Callum Davies

Author: Callum Davies

Callum is an experienced teacher of GCSE and A-Level Computer Science. He has 4 years of teaching experience and has detailed knowledge of how to achieve exam success, having marked for OCR A-Level. Callum is now a software engineer and regularly mentors new engineers.