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  2. High concept - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High_concept

    High-concept narratives differ from analogous narratives. In the case of the latter, a high-concept story may be employed to allow commentary on an implicit subtext. A prime example of this might be George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four, which asks, "What if we lived in a future of totalitarian government?" while simultaneously generating social ...

  3. Game design document - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Game_design_document

    The director might pass the concept to others as part of the design staff, producers, or shown to the entire department or company, giving the concept a higher chance at being more captivating with the addition of a buoyant and imaginative group of people. [16] The Game Concept portion of the document may contain the following: Introduction

  4. High-level design - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High-level_design

    A high-level design document or HLDD adds the necessary details to the current project description to represent a suitable model for building. This document includes a high-level architecture diagram depicting the structure of the system, such as the hardware, database architecture, application architecture (layers), application flow ...

  5. PDF - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PDF

    PDF's emphasis on preserving the visual appearance of documents across different software and hardware platforms poses challenges to the conversion of PDF documents to other file formats and the targeted extraction of information, such as text, images, tables, bibliographic information, and document metadata. Numerous tools and source code ...

  6. Concept of operations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Concept_of_operations

    A concept of operations (abbreviated CONOPS, CONOPs, [1] or ConOps [2]) is a document describing the characteristics of a proposed system from the viewpoint of an individual who will use that system. Examples include business requirements specification or stakeholder requirements specification (StRS) .

  7. Documentation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Documentation

    Examples are user guides, white papers, online help, and quick-reference guides. Paper or hard-copy documentation has become less common. Paper or hard-copy documentation has become less common. [ citation needed ] Documentation is often distributed via websites, software products, and other online applications.

  8. High- and low-level - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High-_and_low-level

    In neuroscience, low-level would relate to the functioning of a cell (or part of a cell, or molecule) and high level to the overall function or activity of a neural system. [1] In documentation, a high-level document contains the executive summary, the low-level documents the technical specifications.

  9. Functional specification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Functional_specification

    A functional specification is the more technical response to a matching requirements document, e.g. the Product Requirements Document "PRD" [citation needed]. Thus it picks up the results of the requirements analysis stage. On more complex systems multiple levels of functional specifications will typically nest to each other, e.g. on the system ...