The Nature of Abstraction (OCR A Level Computer Science)
Revision Note
The Nature & Need of Abstraction
What is the nature and need for abstraction?
Abstraction is the process of removing unnecessary details of a problem to focus on the important features to implement in a solution
Examples of abstraction include modelling a real life object, environment, action, sequence of actions or concept. Implementations of these include:
a simulator such as a car or flight simulator,
a representation of a building or house in a program or game or,
a map of a bus or train route in a city
When creating a program, developers must identify important features that will contribute to solving the problem or have a role to play in the solution
A specific example of abstraction would be the London underground train route map; travellers do not need to know the geographical layout of the routes, only that getting on at stop A will eventually transport you to stop B
London Underground train route mapĀ
Source: Wikipedia
The geographical London underground train map
Source: Wikimedia
Another example of abstraction would be implementing the trajectory of a projectile, such as a ball or dart, or the physics of a snooker ball on a snooker table
Is gravity or air resistance taken into account, if applicable? Is friction?
The closer the implementation is to reality, the less abstract the solution becomes
Pong is an example of a highly abstracted game of tennis or badminton
The momentum of the ball is constant and there are no extraneous factors that affect the game such as friction or gravity
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