Publisher |
Shroff/O'Reilly |
Publication Year |
2017 |
ISBN-13 |
9789352135035 |
ISBN-10 |
9789352135035 |
Binding |
Paperback |
Number of Pages |
136 Pages |
Language |
(English) |
Dimensions (Cms) |
24 X 18 X 1 |
Weight (grms) |
193 |
Why does poor software quality continue to plague enterprises of all sizes in all industries? Part of the problem lies with the process, rather than individual developers. This practical guide provides ten best practices to help team leaders create an effective working environment through key adjustments to their process.
As a follow-up to their popular book, Building Maintainable Software, consultants with the Software Improvement Group (SIG) offer critical lessons based on their assessment of development processes used by hundreds of software teams. Each practice includes examples of goalsetting to help you choose the right metrics for your team.
Achieve development goals by determining meaningful metrics with the Goal-Question-Metric approach
Translate those goals to a verifiable Definition of Done
Manage code versions for consistent and predictable modification
Control separate environments for each stage in the development pipeline
Automate tests as much as possible and steer their guidelines and expectations
Let the Continuous Integration server do much of the hard work for you
Automate the process of pushing code through the pipeline
Define development process standards to improve consistency and simplicity
Manage dependencies on third party code to keep your software consistent and up to date
Document only the most necessary and current knowledge
Sylvan Rigal
Sylvan Rigal works as a software quality consultant at SIG since 2011 and is advising clients on managing their IT since 2008. He helps clients achieve lower software maintenance costs and enhanced security by prioritizing improvements in software ix design and development processes. He holds a MSc in international business from Maastricht University, The Netherlands (2006). As an active member of SIGís software security team, Sylvan trains consultants on analyzing software security risks. When he is not assessing technical health of software, he is training Brazilian jiu jitsu, enjoying Amsterdamís restaurants or traveling Asia.
Sylvan Rigal
Shroff/O'Reilly