scholarly journals Agile Methodologies and The Use of Its Waterscrumfall Derivative For Software Project Development

2017 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 11-12
Author(s):  
Marzanah A. Jabar ◽  
Norhayati Mohd. Ali ◽  
Yusmadi Yah Jusoh ◽  
Salfarina Abdullah ◽  
S. Mohanarajah ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
Antonio Quiña-Mera ◽  
Lincon Chamorro Andrade ◽  
Javier Montaluisa Yugla ◽  
Doris Chicaiza Angamarca ◽  
Cathy Pamela Guevara-Vega

2022 ◽  
pp. 163-182
Author(s):  
Kamalendu Pal

Agile software development methodologies are attracting attention from academics and practitioners for planning and managing software projects. The eXtreme Programming (XP) challenges conformist wisdom regarding software system development processes and practices as agile methodologies. To work efficiently in the current software development practice, characterized by requirements fuzziness, XP moves away from document-centric operations into people-centric management. In the XP-based software project, the customers play an essential role, having multiple responsibilities such as driving the project, gathering requirements (‘user stories'), and exercising quality control (or acceptance testing). Besides, the customers must liaise with external project stakeholders (e.g., funding authorities, end-users) while maintaining the development team's trust and the wider business. The success of such software project management practices relies on the quality result of each stage of development obtained through rigorous testing. This chapter describes three characteristics of XP project management: customer role, software testing feedback, and learning.


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