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Super Take-out System

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Problem Description

Traditional take-out industry mostly depends on the artificial way to conduct a series of management. For example, when receiving orders, it requires people to record dishes, delivery address and guests’ telephone number, and to calculate the take-out cost, which not only wastes time and reduces the efficiency, but also increases the cost, reduces the profits of the industry, and then makes the traditional take-out consumption suffer bottleneck limitation. Besides that, traditional take-out industry’ marketing means such as publicity and external service are confined to the original medium, for example, to distribute leaflets still needs human to complete. The traditional shop take-out management also adopts papery materials to save information. This method is inconvenient to query or update and easy to tear, and it is also difficult to save with low confidentiality.

In take-out industry, the e-commerce is still in the initial stage of development. But with the continuous increase of Internet users, and accelerating pace of people’ work and life, the network consumption demand will be huge, while the online meal ordering is just developed in this context. Online meal ordering can largely reduce the waste of time, and at the same time help merchants earn more profits, so the network online meal order is bound to become a part of young Internet users’especially white-collars’life.

 

 

System Capabilities

  • The new system should capable of:
  • Collecting the basic information, phone number, address, ordered take-out products of consumers
  • Collecting the basic information, phone number, address, unit price of delivery products, and the delivery fee of the merchants.
  • Allowing merchants inquire consumers’ order information
  • Connecting System through various devices (I.E. desktop and smart phones)

 

Business benefits

  • save operating cost for merchants
  • improve the ordering efficiency
  • obtain more detailed and accurate consumer information
  • provide more efficient publicity channels
  • offer more excellent customer experience

Schedule Plan

First Version

Collect relevant information

7days

Begin planning team project idea

7days

Designing breakdown Structure

7days

Designing reception-ordering system

7days

Designing backstage management system

7 days

Designing the Database

7 days

Debugging the system

7 days

 

 

Budget Plan

  1. Summary Actual Budget:

Server for web hosting and database: $0

Labor: $0 (college students working on this for a project grade)

Total Estimated Budget: $0

  1. Summary “Actual” Budget

Server for web hosting and database: $200

Labor: 2 Systems designers half time: $45/hour

Total estimated bid:  $15000

 

 

3.1 Functional Requirements

 

Web Order System Module

This allows the customer to interact with the system by placing an order. For the restaurant customers to complete this task, they need to provide the following functions:

  1. Create an account
  2. Manage their accounts
  3. Log in to the system
  4. Go to the restaurant menu
  5. Select an item from the menu.
  6. Add a project to the current order.
  7. View their current order.
  8. Delete item / delete all items from the current order.
  9. Provide payment details.
  10. Place an order.
  11. Receive confirmation in order form.
  12. View the order

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Menu management system module

The module provides a powerful user with only the functionality of the administrator. No other users of the system (such as restaurant employees or customers) are not available.

Using the graphical interface, it will allow the administrator to manage the menu that is displayed to users of the Web subscription system:

  1. Add / update / delete food categories from the menu.
  2. Add / update / delete food from the menu.
  3. Update the price of the given food.
  4. Update the additional information (description, photo, etc.) of the given food

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Order Retrieval System Module

This is the simplest module in all three modules. Its design is only used by restaurant staff and offers the following features:

  1. Retrieve a new order from the database.
  2. Display the order in an easy-to-read, graphical way.

Restaurant staff offers the following features:

  • Log in system
  • View pending orders
  • Mark the order status as delivered or delivered
  • Cancel order

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

3.2 Non-functional Requirements

The subcategories of non-functional requirements given are security and performance requirements.

 

 

 

Security

The identified non-functional security requirements include:

  • All data transmitted over the network will be encrypted using openSSl.
  • All employees can only log in to one device at a time
  • The password strength for all users will be performed during account creation.

 

 

Performance requirements

The server can support at least 200 connections at the same time.

The server can support any number of activities, in any case will not lose the meal / order and any payment will not be lost

 

 

 

 

 

3.3 software and hardware requirements

Supported hardware platforms

For initial development of Take-out management system only a single computer is required. The recommended minimum system should have 3GHz processor, 4GB RAM, and disk space as required. For a typical, full deployment of take-out management system, the minimum hardware environment should have:

  • Web application server – 3 GHz processor, 4GB RAM, 30GB disk
  • Database server -3 GHz processor, 4GB RAM, 100 GB RAID 4 + disk
  • File-server – 2 GHz processor, 512 MB RAM, RAID 5 storage with appropriate disk space
  • Application cluster – Application-dependent sizing

Prerequisite Software Requirements

The following software applications must be available on the planned hardware environment before installing the take-out management system. The applications are:

  • Browser (one required, client-side)
  • Web application server (one required, server-side)
  • Relational Database (one required, server-side)
  • File vault server (one required, server-side)

Server-side Software Requirements

  • Web Application Server (1 required) – Apache Tomcat
  • Relational Database Server (1 required) – MariaDB database server

 

Client side software requirements

The client side the following software to be to access the system:

  • A web browser – Firefox version 41 and above, Microsoft internet explorer version 11 and above or Chrome.

Java Web Start (Standard Edition) version 1.4.2 – 1.5.0
 

 

 

UML DESIGN

Use Cases

In order to facilitate a clear and clear view of how end users interact with the system, actors (end users), use case diagrams, and detailed use cases are described for use cases. Find the use cases that are used to log in, log out, add menu items, update menu items, delete menu items, add employees, delete employees, place orders, process payments, accept orders, and deliver items.
                        Actors
There are three actors in system including the admin, restaurant employee/waiter and customer. The Admin is a super actor and can access virtually everything in the system

 

 

4.1 Use Case Diagram

Pic 4-1 show the use case diagram for the take-out ordering system.

Login
Log out
Place order
Add menu item
Update menu
Add employee
Remove employee
Process payment
Cancel order
Deliver order
View order
Administrator
customer
Waiter/restaurant employee
Take-out ordering management system

 

Pic. 4-1 Use case diagram

 

4.2 Use case descriptions

Login use case is shown in the figure below

 

Use Case Log In
Primary Actor Customer
Goal In Context Enable a consumer access to the system for order placement
Preconditions The consumer has a valid username and password and is not already logged in
Trigger The customer requires access to the system to perform their action
Scenario 1) The customer selects ‘Log In’ from the menu
2) The system prompts the user for their username and password
3) The user enters their username and password
4) The device enables access to the system according to access control
Exceptions The user enters an invalid username or password


log out use case

 

Use Case Log out
Primary Actor Customer
Goal in Context Disable user access to the system
Preconditions The user is already logged in
Trigger The user no longer requires access to the system.
Scenario 1) The user selects ‘Log Out’ from the menu

2) The device disables access to the system

Exceptions The user enters an invalid username or password

 

Place order use case

 

Use Case Place order
Primary Actor Customer
Goal in Context Allow user to place meal order
Preconditions The user is already logged in
Trigger The user wants to place an order of the selected meals
Scenario 1) The user selects all the desired meals from the menu

2) The customer selects check out button.

3) The customer confirms the order and selects payment mode

4) The systems confirm a valid payment mode.

5) A confirmation message is displayed

 

Exceptions The user enters an invalid payment mode.

 

View order use case

Use Case View order
Primary Actor Restaurant employee
Goal in Context View consumer orders
Preconditions The user is already logged in
Trigger Restaurant employee need to check the placed orders
Scenario 1) The user selects orders from the menu.

2) The device display a list of placed and pending orders.

Exceptions No orders placed

 

 

Deliver order use case

Use Case Deliver order
Primary Actor Restaurant employee.
Goal in Context Deliver a pending order.
Preconditions The user is already logged and is the pending orders menu.
Trigger The user requires to deliver certain orders.
Scenario 1) The user selects all the orders he or she wants to deliver.
2) The user clicks deliver button

3) The system changes the status of order into delivering and alerts the customer.

Exceptions No pending orders.

 

 

Cancel order use case

Use Case Cancel order
Primary Actor Restaurant employee
Goal in Context The user want to cancel a certain pending order.
Preconditions The user is already logged in and is in the pending order menu.
Trigger The user wants to cancel an order that cannot be delivered due to technical details.
Scenario 1) The user selects all the orders to be cancelled

2) The user clicks the cancel button.

3) the system prompts the user for a confirmation.

4) on clicking ok the system changes the status of the order to cancelled and alerts the customer.

Exceptions No pending orders.

 

 

Process Payment use case

Use Case Process payment
Primary Actor Restaurant employee
Goal in Context Process payment for a delivered order.
Preconditions The user is already logged in
Trigger The user wants to process payment for a delivered order.
Scenario 1) The user selects process payment from the menu.

2) The device displays a list of the orders the specific user is delivering.

3) the user selects all the orders he or she wants to process payment for.

4) the user clicks process payment button.

5) the systems processes payments, displays a confirmation message and sends a receipt to the customer.

Exceptions

 

Add Menu Item Use Case

Use Case Add menu item
Primary Actor administrator
Goal in Context Add a new meal to the menu.
Preconditions The user is already logged in
Trigger The restaurant needs to include a new meal to the menu
Scenario 1) The user selects add menu item from the main menu.
2) The system displays a form where the user enters name of the meal, category, description, images and price.

3) the user clicks add button and confirms the details.

4) the system updates the database and displays the meal on the customer menu.

Exceptions

 

Update Menu item use case

Use Case Update menu
Primary Actor Administrator
Goal in Context Change details of an item such as price of a meal.
Preconditions The user is already logged in
Trigger The user wants to update the menu.
Scenario 1) The user selects menu items from the main menu.
2) The system displays a list of all the items in the menu.

3) The user selects an item to update.

4) The system displays a form with details of the menu item in editable fields.

5) The user edits the intended fields and clicks save button.

6) The system prompts the user to confirm the given details.

7) On confirmation, the system saves the changes in the database, updates customer and displays a confirmation message to administrator.

Exceptions No menu item added.

 

 

Delete menu item use case

Use Case Delete menu item
Primary Actor Administrator
Goal in Context Delete meals from the menu
Preconditions The user is already logged in
Trigger A certain is no longer available in the restaurant and the admin wants to remove it from the menu.
Scenario 1) The user selects menu items from the main menu

2) The system displays a list of all the menu items.

3) The user marks all the meals to delete and clicks the Delete button.

4) The system prompts for confirmation.

5) On confirmation, the system deletes the items from the database, update the customer menu and displays a confirmation message to the administrator.

Exceptions No items in the menu.

 

 

Add employee use case

Use Case Add Employee
Primary Actor Administrator
Goal in Context Create a new user in the system.
Preconditions The user is already logged in
Trigger The user wants to add a new employee to the system.
Scenario 1) The user selects Add employee form the main menu.

2) The system displays a form where administrator add the new employee details

3) The user clicks add button.

4) the system displays a random password which the administrator is supposed to take down and click ok.

5) the systems commit the changes to the database and displays a confirmation message to the  user.

Exceptions

 

Delete Employee use case

Use Case Delete Employee
Primary Actor Administrator
Goal in Context Block an employee from accessing the system.
Preconditions The user is already logged in
Trigger The user wants to deactivate an employee in the system.
Scenario 1) The user selects delete employee from the main menu

2) The system display a list of all the employees.

3) The user selects the desired employee and clicks the delete button.

4) The system prompts the user for a confirmation.

5) On confirmation, the system sets a flag to inactive in the database and displays a confirmation message to the user.

Exceptions No Employee in the system.

 

 

 

Domain Class Diagram

The following subsection presents descriptions for the classes identified for the take-out ordering management system and their relationships.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Admin class

This class represents the system administrator and all the operation he or she can perform in the system. The functions include View Food, Add Menu, Delete Food, Modify Menu, Add employee, Delete Employee.

 

Products Class

This represent the individual dishes and their attributes include name, category, and subcategory and unit price.

 

Guest Class

This class represent a individual who visit online order web application for the first time. The individual can be able to view menu as well as Signing Up.

 

Customer class

This class represent a consumer with an established account. The class attributes include customer ID, name, address, phone number and email. The class functions View Menu, Buy Food, Add to Cart, Make Payment and Delete from cart.

 

 

Cart Class

This represent the cart with all the meals or dishes to be ordered. The class attributes include order Id, number of items in the cart, list of products and their unit place as well the total price.

 

Restaurant Employee Class

This class represents the restaurant staff member. The class attributes include: staff Id and name.

The class functions include view order, deliver order, process payment and cancel order.

 

Payment Class

This class represent the payment. Its attributes include customer Id, name, and card type and card no.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sequence Diagram

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Use Interface Design

This is the sample login interface,

This is the sample payment interface

DATABASE DESIGN

                                                                    i.            Data Description

This subsection describes the data requirement for take-out management system. The data will be organized into tables. The tables with their description are shown below.

Orders

 

Field name Brief Description Field type Restriction
Order_no Order number (KEY FIELD) Integer (20) 0-999999
Order_time Order time Time —–
Order_date Order date Date —–
Payment_status Status of payment String  
       

Orderline

 

Field name Brief Description Field type Restriction
Order_no Order number Integer (20) 0-999999
Item_no Item number Integer (10) 0-999
Quantity Quantity of the item Integer (10) 0-99

Menu

Field name Brief Description Field type Restriction
Item_no Item number (KEY FIELD) Integer (20) 0-999
Item_price Item price Currency $1-999
Item_name The name of Item String(20) 1-20char
Status Status of the item String(2) BX, LX, DX, PX
Discount Discount value Percentage 0%-100%
Photo Photo of the item Object —–
Description Description of the item String (40) 1-40 char

Employee

Field name Brief Description Field type Restriction
Employee_no Employee number (KEY FIELD) Integer (10) 1-99
Name Employee name String (20) 1-20 char
Tel Employee telephone number Integer 8 digits
Address Employee address String (60) 1-60 char
Work_in_time Start work time Time —–
Work_out_time End work time Time —–
Day_off Day off Integer (10) 1-7
Salary Salary of the employee Currency $1-99999
Email Employee email address String(100) 1-100 char
password Employee login password String(20) 1 – 20 char

 

Customers

Field name Brief Description Field type Restriction
Customer_no customer number (KEY FIELD) Integer (10) 1-99
Name customer name String (20) 1-20 char
Tel customer telephone Char(20) 8 digits
Email Customer email address String(100) 1- 100 char
Address customer address String (60) 1-60 char
password Login password String(20) 1-20 char

 

 

Admin

Field name Brief Description Field type Restriction
username Admin username (KEY FIELD) String (30) 1-30 char
Password Admin login password String (20) 1-20char

 

                                                                  ii.            Relational Schema

 

Order (Order_no, Table_no, Order_time, Order_date, Head_no, Payment_status)

 

Orderline (Order_no, Item_no, quantity)

 

Menu (Item_no, Item_name, Item_price, Status, Discount, Photo, Description)

 

Employee (Employee_no, Work_in_time, Work_out_time, Employee_name, Tel, Address, Salary, Dayoff, email, password)

 

 

Customer (customer_no, Work_in_time, Work_out_time, customer_name, Tel, Address, email, password)

 

Admin (username, password)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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