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    Attributes are a very important source of requirements information. Just as every person has attributes (age, hair
    color, gender), each requirement has a source, a relative importance, and time it was created. Attributes do more than
    simply clarify a requirement.  If created properly, they can yield significant information about the state of
    the system. Just as you can run a database query to find all men with brown hair over age 30, given our human example,
    you can run queries on the status of requirements to find all high-priority requirements from the customer in the
    last 30 days. [TEL06]
 
    Examples of attributes
    Listed below is a partial list of some common attributes and a brief description of their meaning. Some attributes are
    best described as a number, date, Boolean (true or false) or a text field for entering free format comments. Other
    attributes can be expressed as lists. For instance, priority type is a list of high, medium, and low; Weekday is a list
    which includes Monday, Tuesday, and so on.
 
    Source - Person, document or other origin of a given requirement.  This is useful for
    determining whom to call for questions or for grouping requirements according to the person making the demands.
 
    Priority - Statement of relative importance of the requirement, either to the system (mandatory, critical,
    optional) or to other requirements (high, medium, low). It is good to track the mandatory or high-priority
    items as an indication of how well the system will meet the greatest needs or for compliance-related metrics.
 
    Assigned to - Who in the organization is responsible for making sure the requirement is met (person's name or
    organizational name).
 
    Comments - Reviewer's or writer's comments on a requirement.
 
    Difficulty - An indication of the level of effort needed or how hard it will be to implement the requirement
    (high, medium, low).
 
    Status - Degree of completeness (completed, partial, not started).
 
    Risk - Confidence measure on the likelihood of meeting (or not meeting) a requirement. Could be high, medium,
    low or the integers one through ten.
 
    Due By - Date the requirement must be provided.
 
    Method of verification - Qualification type to be used to verify that a requirement has been met: analysis,
    demonstration, inspection, test, and walkthrough.
 
    Level of Test - Describes the verification lifecycle stage at which the requirement is determined to be met:
    unit test, component, system or product.
 
    Subsystem Allocation - Name of system or subsystem a requirement is to be assigned to (for instance, flight
    control module, wing assembly, passenger cabin).
 
    Test Number - Identification of a specific test or other method of verification.
 
 
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