Extreme Programming Explained. Embrace Change

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Kent Beck - Extreme Programming Explained. Embrace Change.
Software development projects can be fun, productive, and even daring. Yet they can consistently deliver value to a business and remain under control.... Lire la suite
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Résumé

Software development projects can be fun, productive, and even daring. Yet they can consistently deliver value to a business and remain under control. Extreme Programming (XP) was conceived and developed to address the specific needs of software development conducted by small teams in the face of vague and changing requirements. This new lightweight methodology challenges many conventional tenets, including the long-held assumption that the cost of changing a piece of software necessarily rises dramatically over the course of time. XP recognizes that projects have to work to achieve this reduction in cost and exploit the savings once they have been earned. Fundamentals of XP include: • Distinguishing between the decisions to be made by business interests and those, to be made by project stakeholders. • Writing unit tests before-programming and keeping all of the tests running at all times. • Integrating and testing the whole system-several times a day • Producing all software in pairs, two programmers at one screen. • Starting projects with a simple design that constantly evolves to add needed flexibility and remove unneeded complexity. • Putting a minimal system into production quickly and growing it in whatever directions prove most valuable. Why is XP so controversial? Some sacred cows don't make the cut in XP: • Don't force team members to specialize and become analysts, architects, programmers, testers, and integrators-every XP programmer participates in all of these critical activities every day. • Don't conduct complete up-front analysis and design-an XP project starts with a quick analysis of the entire system, and XP programmers continue to make analysis and design decisions throughout development. • Develop infrastructure and frameworks as you develop your application, not up-front-delivering business value is the heartbeat that drives XP projects. • Don't write and maintain implementation documentation-communication in XP projects occurs face-to-face, or through efficient tests and carefully written code. You may love XP or you may hate it, but Extreme Programming Explained will force you to take a fresh look at how you develop software.

Sommaire

  • THE PROBLEM
    • Risk: the basic problem
    • A development episode
    • Economics of software development
    • Four variables
    • Cost of change
    • Learning to drive
    • Four values
    • Basic principles
    • Back to basics
  • THE SOLUTION
    • Quick overview
    • How could this work? Management strategy
    • Facilities strategy
    • Splitting business and technical responsibility
    • Planning strategy
    • Development strategy
    • Design strategy
    • Testing strategy
  • IMPLEMENTING XP
    • Adopting XP
    • Retrofitting XP
    • Lifecycle of an ideal XP project
    • Roles for people
    • 20-80 rule
    • What makes XP hard
    • When you shouldn't try XP
    • XP at work

Caractéristiques

  • Date de parution
    30/10/2001
  • Editeur
  • Collection
    Extreme Programming
  • ISBN
    0-201-61641-6
  • EAN
    9780201616415
  • Présentation
    Broché
  • Nb. de pages
    190 pages
  • Poids
    0.35 Kg
  • Dimensions
    19,0 cm × 23,0 cm × 1,1 cm

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À propos de l'auteur

Biographie de Kent Beck

Kent Beck owns and operates First Class Software, Inc., where he focuses on his two greatest interests, patterns and Extreme Programming. He has helped pioneer patterns for software development, CRC cards, the HotDraw drawing editor framework, the xUnit unit testing framework, and the rediscovery of test-first programming. He is the author of more than 50 articles on programming and the books The Smalltalk Best Practice Patterns (Prentice-Hall) and Kent Beck's Guide to Better Smalltalk: A Sorted Collection (Cambridge University Press).

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