A process-driven system is like having a recipe that tells you exactly how to make your favorite cookie, step by step.
Imagine you're making cookies, and you have a special recipe book. Every time you want to bake a batch, you follow the steps in the recipe: mix flour and sugar, add eggs, put it in the oven, and wait for it to be ready. That’s like being process-driven, everything happens in order, so you always get the same great cookie.
Like a Baking Machine
Now imagine a magical baking machine that makes cookies on its own. It knows exactly when to mix, when to add ingredients, and when to put them in the oven. That’s like a process-driven system, it follows the same steps every time, without needing someone to tell it what to do.
Why It Matters
If you don’t follow the recipe, sometimes your cookies might come out too flat or too crunchy. A process-driven system helps everything go smoothly, just like following a good recipe helps you make perfect cookies every time.
Examples
- A factory line where each worker has a specific job, making the whole process faster and more efficient.
- Using a to-do list every morning to make sure all tasks are completed on time.
- A chef who follows a recipe step by step so no ingredient is missed.
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See also
- What is Implementation?
- What are shortcuts?
- What is the Pipelining?
- What is reset?
- Can Computers Read Your Mind?