fyp report template
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Bahria University(Karachi Campus)
Department of Applied Sciences & Graduate Studies
FYP Report Format Template
A revised version of FYP Report format. Incorporate the changes as according to the list given below.
Title of project
Revised by Project Coordinator (Asia Samreen)Applied Sciences & Graduate Studies Department
FYP Thesis/Report Contents Copyright Dedication Acknowledgement Declaration of Authentication: All students are required to sign the report submission
declaration form to confirm that FYP report has been done without any plagiarism
Abstract Table of contents List of tables List of Figures Chapters
1. IntroductionThis chapter should explain the purpose of the project
i) The purposeii) The problem iii) The solution
2. Literature Review (Research contribution)3. Requirements
i) Stakeholdersii) Functional and non-Functional Requirementsiii) Feasibilityiv) Project Schedule
4. Methodology And Designi) Logical/Physical modelingii) Diagrams (use- cases, context, ERD etc)iii) GUI
5. Implementation (Component s development and integration) 6. Testing7. Evaluation: This chapter should describe system operation and output evaluation on the
basis of testing.8. Conclusion9. Future work10. References11. Appendices: It is highly appreciated if an overall Feasibility report will be added as the first
Appendix.
Title of project
Revised by Project Coordinator (Asia Samreen)Applied Sciences & Graduate Studies Department
Title Of the FYP(18 to 22 font size)
By
Name (Registration #)Name (Registration #)Name (Registration #)
Supervised by
(Give supervisor name)
Bahria University (Karachi Campus)
Year
FINAL YAER PROJECT REPORT
Title of project
Revised by Project Coordinator (Asia Samreen)Applied Sciences & Graduate Studies Department
TITLE OF THE PROJECT
BY
Name Registration #Name Registration #Name Registration #Name Registration #
Submitted to: Supervisor Name
In fulfillment of the requirement for the degree of
BS (Computer Science)
DEPARTMENT OF APPLIED SCIENCES & GRADUATE STUDIES
BAHRIA UNIVERSITY
2012
Title of project
Revised by Project Coordinator (Asia Samreen)Applied Sciences & Graduate Studies Department
DECLARATION OF AUTHENTICATION
Title of Report
Project Supervisor’s Name
We certify that the project presented in this report is to the best of our knowledge our own. All sources used and any help received in the preparation of this dissertation have been acknowledged. We hereby declare that non of us have submitted this material, either in whole or in part, for any other degree at this or any other institution.
Name and Signatures of students Date
(1)…………………………….. ……………………..
(2)……………………………. …………………….
(3)…………………………….. …………………….
Name and Signature of Supervisor Date
…………………………. ……………………….
Title of project
Revised by Project Coordinator (Asia Samreen)Applied Sciences & Graduate Studies Department
Acknowledgments
This page should consist of the acknowledgements to the people, companies and institutions that have been helpful to the author in compiling the reports. It is normal practice to thank the Head of Institute for the use of facilities with which the project was carried out, the supervisor for his/her suggestions and guidance and any other member of the academic and technical support staff who have made a significant contribution to the success of the project.
Title of project
Revised by Project Coordinator (Asia Samreen)Applied Sciences & Graduate Studies Department
Abstract
The abstract is a brief summary of your research. Typically, an abstract should be one page and/or less than 350 words. Your abstract should consist of concise precise to inform the reader of the content of the report, what the project was about, the main aim of the project, how the work was undertaken and major conclusions drawn from the work performed. It is important not to confuse an abstract with introduction. The first sentence should give the subject of the report and the last sentence should state the primary conclusion of the report. The abstract should be written in the present tense. It should not include illustrative material such as formula, diagrams, and charts. The abstract page numbered ii. It should conclude with short entry ‘Keywords’ …..Nominating several keywords by which a computerized library would find the project.
Title of project
Revised by Project Coordinator (Asia Samreen)Applied Sciences & Graduate Studies Department
Table of contents
The table of the contents is on a separate page and is numbered iii. The table of contents lists the sections of the report, a list of figures and a list of tables along with the page on which they begin.
1. INTRODUCTION....................................................................................................... 10
1.1 Purpose1.2 Problem1.3 Solution
2. BACKGROUND AND LITERATURE REVIEW .............................................. 11
3. REQUIREMENTS.................................................................................................. 12
3.1 Stakeholders3.2 Functional/Non Functional requirements3.3 Scheduling3.4 Costing
4. METHODOLOGY AND DESIGN ....................................................................... 13
4.1 Logical/Physical modeling4.2 Diagrams (use- cases, context, ERD etc)4.3 GUI
5. IMPLEMENTATION ............................................................................................ 14
6. TESTING................................................................................................................. 15
7. EVALUATION ........................................ ERROR! BOOKMARK NOT DEFINED.
8 CONCLUSIONS ..................................................................................................... 17
9. FUTURE WORK.................................................................................................... 18
10. APPENDICES......................................................................................................... 19
11. GENERAL GUIDELINES..................................................................................... 20
11.1 TYPING AND SIZE OF PAPER................................................................................ 2011.2 PAGE NUMBER AND SECTION NUMBER............................................................... 2011.3 MARGIN BOUNDARIES........................................................................................ 2111.4 DIAGRAMS AND FIGURES ................................................................................... 2111.5 PHOTOCOPYING ................................................................................................. 2111.6 FIXING OF PHOTOGRAPH .................................................................................... 2211.7 TABLES .............................................................................................................. 2211.8 EQUATIONS........................................................................................................ 22
Title of project
Revised by Project Coordinator (Asia Samreen)Applied Sciences & Graduate Studies Department
11.9 UNITS................................................................................................................. 2211.10 REFERENCES .................................................................................................. 23
11.10.1 List of References.................................................................................. 2311.10.2 Journal Articles..................................................................................... 2311.10.3 Conference Paper ................................................................................. 2411.10.4 Books..................................................................................................... 2411.10.5 Manuals................................................................................................. 2411.10.6 Unpublished Reports and Theses.......................................................... 2411.10.7 Web Based............................................................................................. 24
Title of project
Revised by Project Coordinator (Asia Samreen)Applied Sciences & Graduate Studies Department
1. Introduction
This should introduce the reader to the subject are described in the report, what the project was about and why it was undertaken. It should be written in a manner sufficient to allow a reader unfamiliar with the project to appreciate any background knowledge necessary to understand the report.
Defines and limits the ‘Scope’ of the effort. Clearly describe how you tackled the problem.
Describe the function, show the block diagram, and give the performance specifications as they appear in your final proposal. Show that you know what variables are important in your project’s performance, and what values they should take on. Describe briefly the subprojects into which the project has been divided. Introduce the structure of the report (what you will cover in which chapter).
To describe the precise detail bout your project, divide your chapter into sub headings. The first heading Purpose should give a brief summary of the usage of your project. The need in industry that makes you to work on this problem, you have to mention in the heading Problem. You also need to give a brief discussion about how you identify this problem. The Solution you have designed for the problem will be given under the subheading Solution.
Title of project
Revised by Project Coordinator (Asia Samreen)Applied Sciences & Graduate Studies Department
2. Background and Literature Review
This section should describe the current state of knowledge concerning the subject involved in the project. It should review literature on the subject and highlight the information relevant to the immediate activity undertaken in the project. The survey should cover a sufficient amount of available literature to highlight the gaps in current knowledge and to support and allow predictions to be made regarding main work covered in the project. Try to include related work (if you know). Where literature source are quoted, these should be accompanied by the author/s surname and year of publication within parentheses referring to the “Reference” section of the report.
Title of project
Revised by Project Coordinator (Asia Samreen)Applied Sciences & Graduate Studies Department
3. Requirements
All the requirements should be clearly stated such as Functional and Non-functionalrequirements.
Stakeholders/Possible customers of the project should be mentioned if possible. As the project should be live therefore you have to mention the organization for which the project is to be constructed or the customers of your project.
If your project is hardware based then you have to provide the detail of the hardware along with the total cost.
Timeline charts are the essential part of the documentation. PERT and GANTT charts should be made with the actual time division. You can also employ Critical Path Method to show the various critical situations for your project and /or the possible deliverables according to the schedule given in the time charts.
Clearly describe how you tackled the problem. Provide enough information for knowledgeable person where difficulty or lack of time has caused a change in the aims of the project. The nature of any changes and the reasons for these changes should be explicitly stated within this section.
A Feasibility report should be the integral part of this chapter to show the feasibility analysis of all phases where it has been done according to the requirement.
Title of project
Revised by Project Coordinator (Asia Samreen)Applied Sciences & Graduate Studies Department
4. Methodology and Design
You are required to describe
i. Requirement analysis techniques.
ii. Comparison of different choices for algorithms and data structures.
iii. Overall system structure.
iv. Data Normalization.
Give all relevant diagrams that you have used to develop the logical design of the project as well as the components helping you to build the physical design.
Context diagram, Data flow, actor-usecase diagram, entity relation, and object diagrams as appropriate.
Use your project logbook (file) to remind you of what decisions you took, and why you thought at the time they were good. Later, in the evolution, you can criticize them.
At this stage you are required to depict the possible Graphical User Interface of your Project. Mention forms, data fields and validation checks.
Title of project
Revised by Project Coordinator (Asia Samreen)Applied Sciences & Graduate Studies Department
5. Implementation
Give code details (not a complete listing, but description of key parts). Discuss the most important/interesting aspects. It probably won’t be possible to discuss everything- give a rationale for what you do discuss. Code shall be written following the standard such as Naming Conventions.
Title of project
Revised by Project Coordinator (Asia Samreen)Applied Sciences & Graduate Studies Department
6. Testing
Test plan – how the program/system was verified. Put the actual test results in the Appendix.
Title of project
Revised by Project Coordinator (Asia Samreen)Applied Sciences & Graduate Studies Department
7. Evaluation
This section should fully and logically discuss the progression of the project including the methods used and the results of experimentation, or the design; in such a way that examiner can evaluate the worth of the project. The discussion should be backed by detailed reference to material in the testing and result section of the report.
Title of project
Revised by Project Coordinator (Asia Samreen)Applied Sciences & Graduate Studies Department
8. Conclusions
This section should be a concise statement of the conclusions which may be drawn from the work attempted. The reader needs to be convinced that the design will work. If
Uncertainties remain, they should be pointed out, and alternatives, such as modifying performance specifications, should be spelled out to deal with foreseeable outcome.
Title of project
Revised by Project Coordinator (Asia Samreen)Applied Sciences & Graduate Studies Department
9. Future work
This section may be used to propose further work which may be carried out on the project in subsequent study projects. Suggestions of this type should be limited to proposals which involve significant amounts of work such as major modifications of equipment or development of student practical experiments. Any suggestion is to be given in sufficient detail to provide adequate information for a future student to be able to fully appraise the proposal.
Title of project
Revised by Project Coordinator (Asia Samreen)Applied Sciences & Graduate Studies Department
10. Appendices
These shall be used to give detailed results that shall be summarized in main text. The normal practice is “Annex A, B, C…” and, when required, “Appendix (to annex) 1, 2, 3…..” They should identify on every page by running header. Following items should be included in appendices
Title of project
Revised by Project Coordinator (Asia Samreen)Applied Sciences & Graduate Studies Department
11. General Guidelines
- Begin each chapter on new page.
- Each chapter should have small introduction at beginning of chapter. Introduction must link to previous chapter. It is a one or more then one paragraph but not more than one page that introduces the reader to the subject. The introduction presents basic background material, the history of the problem and contains the key sentence outlining the subjects to be discussed.
The total report length should under no circumstances exceed 150 pages; most projects somewhat shorter. There is no value in trying to artificially lengthen your project by ‘padding’ it. Each project is unique and has its own natural length, and you will probably know when you have said everything that you need to be said.
11.1 Typing and size of paper
I. The report is to be typewritten on one side of the paper on international size A4 paper (297mmX210mm). This paper must be good quality bond.
ii. Reports length should be 80-150 pages.
iii. Use Times New Roman, size 12 font throughout the reports.
Use 1.5 or double spacing.
11.2 Page number and Section number
- Use lower case Roman numerals for preliminary pages
I. Title page (not numbered on page)
ii. Abstract
Table of Contents
The text of the report begins with Arabic number 1. Number all pages. Page numbers can be inserted either at the bottom/top right or the bottom/top center.
All appendices should number as A-1, A-2, etc. for pages under appendix A, and B-1, B-2, etc. for pages under appendix B (See Table of Contents.).
Title of project
Revised by Project Coordinator (Asia Samreen)Applied Sciences & Graduate Studies Department
A hierarchical numbering scheme for chapter numbering shall be used. For instance, use 1 for chapter one, 2 for chapter 2, 1.1 for the subsection 1 of chapter 1, etc. (See the Table of Contents).
11.3 Margin boundaries
I. 1 -inch left margin.
ii. 0.5-inch margin on the other three sides.
11.4 Diagrams and figures
Figures and table should be inserted in the text in one of the three places
A full page diagram or illustration must be inserted on the left hand side facing the typescript which described it.
Small diagrams should be incorporated in the text with the legend appearing below (not recommended).
Each graph, diagram, etc., should have a figure number and title typed below it. The type style should be same as the text. Figures should be numbered consecutively (Fig.1, Fig. 2) or by chapters (Fig. 1.1, Fig 1.2, Fig. 2.1, etc). Whichever numbering system you use,make sure that you follow the same system for tables and equations.
Line drawings, graphs, and monograms should be in bold clear lines. Where graphs, diagrams and figures cannot be mounted vertically on the page these are to be mounted and labeled in such a way that they can be read from the right hand side(900 on the page) of the page .
All the axes of graphs are to be labeled with the parameter and its units. Information on illustrations and graphs such as labels, scales etc. must be typewritten.
11.5 Photocopying
Title of project
Revised by Project Coordinator (Asia Samreen)Applied Sciences & Graduate Studies Department
All the diagrams, etc. must be reproduced by an electronic or electrostatic or photographic method which is known not to fade.
11.6 Fixing of photograph
Full page photographs should be bound into the report. Small photographs must be firmly fixed to the paper. An alternative is to use color photocopying or digital processing.
11.7 Tables
Each table should be numbered consecutively (Table 1, Table 2) or by chapter (Table 1.1, Table 1.2, Table 2.1).Table number should be centre above the top of the table and be followed on the next line by a brief descriptive caption, preferably in cap. The type should be the same as the text. Refer to each table in text by number “In Table 1, one can clearly see………”The same rules for location of figures apply to tables.
TABLE 1. MEASURED RESISTOR VALUES AND THE METER ERROR
Nominal Value Marked Measured Value Error (%)
11.8 Equations
Centre each equation on separate line. Number equations consecutively in parentheses at the right margin. Equation may be referenced by number in the text, using parentheses around the number.
Y (t) = sin (x) dx (1)
11.9 Units
Title of project
Revised by Project Coordinator (Asia Samreen)Applied Sciences & Graduate Studies Department
The S.I. system of units is to be used throughout. Where difficulties are introduced by quotation of imperial units from reference source, these should be accompanied by the appropriate conversion to S.I. units in parentheses.
11.10 References
The references must list all published information sources that are directly quoted or used to support the technical discussion or equations. Reference to these sources must be made at the appropriate points within the report text. Use numbers enclosed in brackets in the text [1]. Each reference is preceded by a bracketed number in the list of reference. Reference number in the text should look as follows
[1] “User-friendly Support Environment for Requirement Analysis In User Interface Design”, Seongjun Yun, Minseok Pang, Hongjin Cho, Jongho Chae, Yoonjung Choi, Eun-Seok Lee
[1]
[3], [4]
[5]- [7]
These are all to be on the line and within punctuation marks. Example for textual referencing.
Maxwell [1] states that………
Reference should be cited as follows
11.10.1 List of References
References should be ordered alphabetically according to the surname of the first author (use the editor’s name or the organization’s name when the author’s name is absent). A list of references is the last section of each chapter.
11.10.2 Journal Articles
Title of project
Revised by Project Coordinator (Asia Samreen)Applied Sciences & Graduate Studies Department
R. A. Barry and P. A. Humblet, “Models of blocking probability in all-optical networks with and without wavelength changers,” IEEE JSAC/SAC/LT Special issue on Optical Networks, 14(5) pp 858-867, June 1996.
11.10.3 Conference Paper
Gouda, M.G. and Dayal, U. (1971). Optimal semi-join schedules for query processing in local
Distributed database systems. In Proceedings of ACM SIGMOD International Conference on
The Management of Data, (Ann Arbor, Michigan, April 29 – May 1, 1980.) ACM, New York, 1981, pp. 164 – 165.
11.10.4 Books
Papoulis, Probability, Random Variables, and Stochastic Processes. McGraw-Hill, New York, 1984
11.10.5 Manuals
IBM. (1984). Information Systems Planning Guide. Fourth Edition, July 1984. SPSS Inc. (1983). SPSS-X User’s Guide. McGraw Hill Book Company, New York, 1983.
11.10.6 Unpublished Reports and Theses
Thorpe, A. (1982). Stability tests on a tender-price prediction model. M.Sc. Thesis, Loughborough University of Technology, UK. 1982.
11.10.7 Web Based
http//www.westwords.com/guffey/apa.html, “introduction of information technology”, West world technologies , last visited on 12 November 2008.
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