What are prototyping phases?

Building something is like making a sandcastle, you don’t just dump all the sand at once and hope it looks good. You start small, test your ideas, and keep improving step by step. That’s what prototyping phases are: different steps where you try out your idea in simple ways before making it full-sized.

Like Testing a New Toy

Imagine you’re building a new toy car. In the first phase, you might just draw it on paper, that's like sketching your idea. Then you might make a tiny version out of clay or cardboard, that’s a rough prototype. You test how it moves, maybe even let your friend try it out. If it doesn’t roll straight, you tweak it, that’s the testing phase.

Building Up to Big Ideas

Each time you improve it, you're moving closer to the final toy car, like going from a mini version to the real thing. These steps are like having little practice runs, helping you catch problems before they become big ones. It's just like how you learn to ride a bike: first on two wheels, then with training wheels, and finally on your own! Building something is like making a sandcastle, you don’t just dump all the sand at once and hope it looks good. You start small, test your ideas, and keep improving step by step. That’s what prototyping phases are: different steps where you try out your idea in simple ways before making it full-sized.

Like Testing a New Toy

Imagine you’re building a new toy car. In the first phase, you might just draw it on paper, that's like sketching your idea. Then you might make a tiny version out of clay or cardboard, that’s a rough prototype. You test how it moves, maybe even let your friend try it out. If it doesn’t roll straight, you tweak it, that’s the testing phase.

Building Up to Big Ideas

Each time you improve it, you're moving closer to the final toy car, like going from a mini version to the real thing. These steps are like having little practice runs, helping you catch problems before they become big ones. It's just like how you learn to ride a bike: first on two wheels, then with training wheels, and finally on your own!

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Examples

  1. A child builds a toy car from cardboard and rubber wheels to see if it rolls.
  2. A chef tests different recipes for a cake by making small batches each time.
  3. A student creates a paper airplane to test how far it can fly.

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