The
Caliber Visualize
tutorial provides a step-by-step introduction to defining requirements and
creating visually-rich and interactive process design diagrams and functional
software simulations using
Caliber Visualize.
Tutorial Objective
Describes the objective of the Caliber Visualize tutorial.
Step 1 - Enable a Project
Enable a project in Caliber Visualize to logically group a related set of project assets.
Create a Scenario Scenarios are interactive flowchart diagrams that can be used to visually depict, understand, and validate a sequential business process.
Step 3 - Add Swimlanes to a Scenario
A swimlane is a scenario object that you can use to visually distinguish logical groups of steps in a process.
Step 4 - Running A Scenario Storyboard
A scenario storyboard is an interactive representation of the steps in the scenario that includes controls to navigate through the steps and provide feedback on the process design.
Step 5 - Adding Discussions to a Scenario Storyboard
The scenario storyboard is a collaborative tool that you can distribute to all project stakeholders to view in a Web browser. In the Storyboard Viewer, reviewers can add discussions for all project stakeholders to see.
Step 6 - Create a Simulation
A simulation is an interactive, functionally-rich software application prototype that is viewed in a Web browser. Simulations include screens, pages, configurable data, and working controls that reviewers can interact with to test drive a software application prototype.
Step 10 - Run the Simulation
Describes the process to run the Login simulation from the Simulation Designer toolbar.
Step 11 - Add Discussions to the Simulation
Project stakeholders who review a simulation can add discussions using the Reviewer tools feature. Discussions added to a simulation are visible to all reviewers.
Step 12 - Trace a Visualization to and from a Requirement
To add a visual context to a written requirement, you can create a trace to/from a scenario or simulation with a specific requirement. This allows you to graphically demonstrate a textual requirement to clarify the intention of the requirement.