DFD Key Points


  • All the data flows are labelled and describe the information that is being carried.
  • It tends to make the diagram easier to read if the processes are kept to the middle, the external entities to the left and the data stores appear on the right hand side of the diagram.
  • The process names start with a strong verb
  • Each process has access to all the information it needs. In the example above, process 4 is required to check orders. Although the case study has not been given, it is reasonable to suppose that the process is looking at a customer’s order and checking that any order items correspond to ones that the company sell. In order to do this the process is reading data from the product data store.
  • Each process should have an output. If there is no output then there is no point in having that process. A corollary of this is that there must be at least one input to a process as it cannot produce data but can only convert it form one form to another.
  • Data stores should have at least one data flow reading from them and one data flow writing to them. If the data is never accessed there is a question as to whether it should be stored. In addition, there must be some way of accumulating data in the data store in the first place so it is unlikely there will be no writing to the data store.
  • Data may flow from
    • External entity to process and vice-versa
    • Process to process
    • Process to data store and vice-versa
  • No logical order is implied by the choice of id for the process. In the example process id’s start at 4. There is no significance to this.

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