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  2. Development, testing, acceptance and production - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Development,_testing...

    Development: The program or component is developed on a development system. This development environment might have no testing capabilities. Testing: Once the software developer thinks it is ready, the product is copied to a test environment, to verify it works as expected. This test environment is supposedly standardized and in close alignment ...

  3. V-model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/V-Model

    In project management it is a method comparable to PRINCE2 and describes methods for project management as well as methods for system development. The V-model, while rigid in process, can be very flexible in application, especially as it pertains to the scope outside of the realm of the System Development Lifecycle normal parameters.

  4. Salesforce - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salesforce

    Salesforce, Inc. is an American cloud-based software company headquartered in San Francisco, California. It provides applications focused on sales, customer service, marketing automation, e-commerce, analytics, artificial intelligence, and application development.

  5. Kimball lifecycle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kimball_lifecycle

    The Kimball lifecycle is a methodology for developing data warehouses, and has been developed by Ralph Kimball and a variety of colleagues. The methodology "covers a sequence of high level tasks for the effective design, development and deployment" of a data warehouse or business intelligence system. [1]

  6. Callout - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Callout

    In publishing, a callout or call-out is a short string of text connected by a line, arrow, or similar graphic to a feature of an illustration or technical drawing, and giving information about that feature. The term is also used to describe a short piece of text set in larger type than the rest of the page and intended to attract attention.

  7. Callback verification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Callback_verification

    Callback verification, also known as callout verification or Sender Address Verification, is a technique used by SMTP software in order to validate e-mail addresses. The most common target of verification is the sender address from the message envelope (the address specified during the SMTP dialogue as " MAIL FROM ").

  8. Bottom-up and top-down design - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bottom-up_and_top-down_design

    Illustration of bottom up and top down approach to heap sort. Bottom-up and top-down are both strategies of information processing and ordering knowledge, used in a variety of fields including software, humanistic and scientific theories (see systemics), and management and organization. In practice they can be seen as a style of thinking ...

  9. Call stack - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Call_stack

    In other environments, the caller has a preallocated area at the top of its stack frame to hold the arguments it supplies to other subroutines it calls. This area is sometimes termed the outgoing arguments area or callout area. Under this approach, the size of the area is calculated by the compiler to be the largest needed by any called subroutine.