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Process analysis

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Process analysis is a form of technical writing and expository writing "designed to convey to the reader how a change takes place through a series of stages".[1]

While the traditional process analysis and a set of instructions are both organized chronologically, the reader of a process analysis is typically interested in understanding the chronological components of a system that operates largely without the reader's direct actions (such as how the body digests an apple), while the reader of a set of instructions intends to use the instructions in order to accomplish a specific, limited task (such as how to bake an apple pie). By contrast, the reader of a mechanism description is more interested in an object in space (such as the form and nutritional value of a particular kind of apple).

References

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  1. ^ Dennis G. Jerz. "Process Description: How to Write about a Sequence of Events". Retrieved 16 August 2011.

See also

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