In this project, your team will put to use the skills you have learned for reading RFPs, creating detailed requirements and then a detailed design. Either or both parts may be documented with text, unit tests, UML, or a combination of these.
Carrying a pencil and score card when playing mini-golf is a pain; holding the club, ball, and trying to write the score down (with no table) is difficult. A local mini-golf course chain has contracted your software development company to automate scoring. At each hole is a keypad on a card-swipe station. The customer hopes such high-tech mini-golf courses will attract more customers.
For cost reasons, the various courses around Tampa Bay all use the same central computer (already installed), connected to the card-swipe stations at each course using a network. All the hardware has been installed already and the network is up and running.
The one use-case for the RFP is:
Think about what happens when the computer or network goes down.
A copy of the requirements and design documents for your team. This should include use-case(s), functional, and non-functional (operational) requirements. Your team must make those up, but feel free to consult the customer (that is, your instructor) if you want guidance. The design should include any technology requirements and system description, in addition to a detailed design of any classes your design calls for, with their important members listed. You can list those in text or UML