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The Two-Step Design Process
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Charles B. Kreitzberg, Ph.D.
President
Cognetics Corporation


This article was originally published in Dr. K's Cafe, an online newsletter.


A source of much confusion in software design is the failure to realize that there are two different kinds of design which go into the creation of a software program. These are: (1) interaction design and (2) technical design. Traditionally these two design domains have been intermixed in an ad hoc fashion, to the detriment of usability.

Technical design relates to the architecture of the program itself; the code which executes business functions as well as the code which manages data access and interacts with the operating environment.

Interaction design relates to the architecture which the user sees. It is concerned with screen objects, data representation and navigation.

In a two-stage approach, such as LUCID, the assumption is that the interaction design will largely precede the technical design. It is an extension of the requirements analysis process. Whereas simple requirements analysis specifies *what* the software must do, the interaction analysis adds *how* the software should do it.

The sequence of activities is:

Stage 1 interaction analysis -> prototype -> design QA/iterative refinement
Stage 2 technical analysis -> technical design -> implementation -> QA

This is, by the way, oversimplified. Since the performance of the UI depends upon the underlying technical architecture, there must be some overlap between stages one and two. Note that there are two QA steps, one associated with each stage.

Another way of looking at the two-stage methodology comes from object oriented analysis and design (OOA/D), in which a three tiered architecture is sometimes used. The three tiers are:

Presentation Layer
Business Objects Layer
Data Management Layer

The interaction analysis applies to the presentation layer, while the technical design applies to the business objects and data management layers. Each layer communicates with the adjacent layers through messaging.

The interaction analysis and technical analysis can use similar methodology (such as use-case and scenario) but the interaction analysis is usually conducted at a fine level of granularity which would be confusing and inappropriate for the entire system.

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