University of Hertfordshire (London)
Latest uploads at University of Hertfordshire (London). Looking for notes at University of Hertfordshire (London)? We have lots of notes, study guides and study notes available for your school.
-
46
- 0
- 0
Majors at University of Hertfordshire (London)
Notes available for the following studies at University of Hertfordshire (London)
-
Accounting and Finance 1
-
BA Tourism Management 1
-
Biomedical Science 1
-
BSc Accounting and Finance 2
-
Business Management 2
-
Computer Science 32
-
Information Technology and Business Systems 3
-
Masters of Pharmacy 2
-
Project management 1
-
Tourism Management 1
Latest notes & summaries University of Hertfordshire (London)
Summarised notes on function application, using functions to specify operations on values, sidetrack: more symbols from logic, the existential qualifier, the universal qualifier and operations on sequences. 
 
Easy to understand with bullet points.
- Class notes
- • 2 pages's •
-
University of Hertfordshire (London)•Foundations of Computation
Preview 1 out of 2 pages
Summarised notes on function application, using functions to specify operations on values, sidetrack: more symbols from logic, the existential qualifier, the universal qualifier and operations on sequences. 
 
Easy to understand with bullet points.
A summarised table with the symbol, explanation and examples of notations. 
 
Includes notation on Sets and Sidetracks, Using Sets to Model Data, Relations, Functions and Sequences, Operations On Values, and An Introduction to Formal Languages.
- Class notes
- • 3 pages's •
-
University of Hertfordshire (London)•Foundations of Computation
Preview 1 out of 3 pages
A summarised table with the symbol, explanation and examples of notations. 
 
Includes notation on Sets and Sidetracks, Using Sets to Model Data, Relations, Functions and Sequences, Operations On Values, and An Introduction to Formal Languages.
Summarised notes include: 
 
1. Release testing, 
2. User testing, 
3. Test tools, 
4. System readiness, 
5. System changeover. 
 
Easy to understand with bullet points.
- Class notes
- • 1 pages's •
-
University of Hertfordshire (London)•Computer Science Development Exercise
Preview 1 out of 1 pages
Summarised notes include: 
 
1. Release testing, 
2. User testing, 
3. Test tools, 
4. System readiness, 
5. System changeover. 
 
Easy to understand with bullet points.
Summarised notes include: 
 
1. Introduction, 
2. Notation for data flow diagrams, 
4. External entities, boundary & processes, 
5. Data stores & data flows, 
6. Levelled data flow diagrams, 
and more... 
 
Easy to understand with bullet points.
- Class notes
- • 2 pages's •
-
University of Hertfordshire (London)•Computer Science Development Exercise
Preview 1 out of 2 pages
Summarised notes include: 
 
1. Introduction, 
2. Notation for data flow diagrams, 
4. External entities, boundary & processes, 
5. Data stores & data flows, 
6. Levelled data flow diagrams, 
and more... 
 
Easy to understand with bullet points.
Summarised notes include: 
 
1. Introduction, 
2. Verification & validation, 
3. Inspections & testing, 
4. Stages of testing, 
5. Development testing, 
6. Benefits of test-driven development (TDD). 
 
Easy to understand with bullet points.
- Class notes
- • 1 pages's •
-
University of Hertfordshire (London)•Computer Science Development Exercise
Preview 1 out of 1 pages
Summarised notes include: 
 
1. Introduction, 
2. Verification & validation, 
3. Inspections & testing, 
4. Stages of testing, 
5. Development testing, 
6. Benefits of test-driven development (TDD). 
 
Easy to understand with bullet points.
Summarised notes include: 
 
1. Requirements engineering processes, 
2. Requirements elicitation & analysis, 
3. Requirements discovery, 
4. Requirements validation, 
5. Requirements management, 
6. Summary. 
 
Easy to understand with bullet points.
- Class notes
- • 2 pages's •
-
University of Hertfordshire (London)•Computer Science Development Exercise
Preview 1 out of 2 pages
Summarised notes include: 
 
1. Requirements engineering processes, 
2. Requirements elicitation & analysis, 
3. Requirements discovery, 
4. Requirements validation, 
5. Requirements management, 
6. Summary. 
 
Easy to understand with bullet points.