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(how does the system behave with respect to some observable attributes
like performance, reusability, reliability, etc.). Both aspects are relevant to software development.
However, non-functional issues have received little attention compared to functional ones: there are a
lot of formal specification languages and formal methods to deal with functionality of systems, but
non-functionality is addressed by just a few approaches, often semi-formal or informal and limited in
scope.
These approaches can be classified as process-oriented or product-oriented . Process-oriented approaches [MCN92, LS95] use non-functional information to guide the development of software systems. On the other hand, product-oriented approaches deal with non-functional issues by means of stating non-functional characteristics in the components themselves, being then possible to examine software products to check if they fall within the constraints of non-functionality. In this position paper we are going to focus in the product-oriented side; however, it is important to remark that product-oriented and process-oriented techniques should be seen not as alternative but as complementary, both contributing to a comprehensive framework for dealing with non-functionality.
Xavier Franch