Difference between revisions of "Success Criteria"

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From a logical viewpoint, success criteria must be composed of a set of [[sound]], [[precise]], and [[terminable]] statements. This means that they can be assessed by some computational procedures that are reliably correct, having the appropriate level of precision, and can be determined within limited spacetime resources.
From a logical viewpoint, success criteria must be composed of a set of [[sound]], [[precise]], and [[terminable]] statements. This means that they can be assessed by some computational procedures that are reliably correct, having the appropriate level of precision, and can be determined within limited spacetime resources.


The term of [[Success Criteria]] is often talked as Desirable traits:  
It is often used as [[Desirable traits]]:  
{{:Desirable traits}}
{{:Desirable traits}}



Revision as of 04:00, 23 August 2021

In a Logic Model, Success Criteria is a kind of logic condition that checks the status or degrees of accomplishment based on the Outputs generated by the execution of prescribed Process.

From a logical viewpoint, success criteria must be composed of a set of sound, precise, and terminable statements. This means that they can be assessed by some computational procedures that are reliably correct, having the appropriate level of precision, and can be determined within limited spacetime resources.

It is often used as Desirable traits: It is the Success Criteria of a design. This term is often considered as the first principle when thinking about software design. [1]