Modeling Maturity Levels

From HandWiki

Modeling Maturity Levels is a classification system defined by Anneke Kleppe and Jos Warmer in their book MDA Explained (published by Addison-Wesley). The levels characterize the role of modeling in a software project. The concept shows resemblance to the way software processes are rated with the Capability Maturity Model.

There are 6 levels:

Level 0
No Specification: the specification of software is not written down. It is kept in the minds of the developers
Level 1
Textual Specification: the software is specified by a natural language text (be it English or Chinese or something else), written down in one or more documents
Level 2
Text with Models: a textual specification is enhanced with several models to show some of the main structures of the system
Level 3
Models with Text: the specification of software is written down in one or more models. In addition to these models, natural language text is used to explain details, the background, and the motivation of the models, but the core of the specifications lies in the models.
Level 4
Precise Models: the specification of the software is written down in one or more models. Natural language can still be used to explain the background and motivation of the models, but it takes on the same role as comments in source code.
Level 5
Models only: the models are precise and detailed enough to allow complete code generation. The code generators at this level have become as trustworthy as compilers, therefore no developer needs to even look at the generated code.[citation needed]

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