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Extreme Programming and Agile Processes in Software Engineering

6th International Conference, XP 2005, Sheffield, UK, June 18-23, 2005, Proceedings

  • Conference proceedings
  • © 2005

Overview

Editors:
  1. Hubert Baumeister
    1. Informatik og Matematisk Modellering, Danmarks Tekniske Universitet, Lyngby

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  2. Michele Marchesi
    1. FlossLab s.r.l., Cagliari, Italy

    You can also search for this editor inPubMed Google Scholar

  3. Mike Holcombe
    1. Department of Computer Science, University of Sheffield, UK

    You can also search for this editor inPubMed Google Scholar

Part of the book series:Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS, volume 3556)

Part of the book sub series:Programming and Software Engineering (LNPSE)

Included in the following conference series:

Conference proceedings info: XP 2005.

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About this book

Extreme Programming has come a long way since its ?rst use in the C3 project almost 10 years ago. Agile methods have found their way into the mainstream, and at the end of last year we saw the second edition of Kent Beck’s book on Extreme Programming, containing a major refactoring of XP. This year, the 6th International Conference on Extreme Programming and Agile Processes in Software Engineering took place June 18–23 in She?eld. As in the yearsbefore, XP 2005provideda unique forum for industry and academic professionals to discuss their needs and ideas on Extreme Programming and - ile methodologies. These proceedings re?ect the activities during the conference which ranged from presentation of research papers, invited talks, posters and demonstrations, panels and activity sessions, to tutorials and workshops. - cluded are also papers from the Ph.D. and Master’s Symposium which provided a forum for young researchers to present their results and to get feedback. Asvariedastheactivities werethe topicsofthe conferencewhichcoveredthe presentationofnewandimprovedpractices,empiricalstudies,experiencereports and case studies, and last but not least the social aspects of agile methods. The papers and the activities went through a rigorous reviewing process. Each paper was reviewed by at least three Program Committee members and wasdiscussedcarefullyamongtheProgramCommittee.Of62paperssubmitted, only 22 were accepted as full papers.

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Table of contents (71 papers)

  1. Experience Reports

    1. Lean Software Management Case Study: Timberline Inc.

      • Peter Middleton, Amy Flaxel, Ammon Cookson
      Pages 1-9
    2. XP South of the Equator: An eXPerience Implementing XP in Brazil

      • Alexandre Freire da Silva, Fábio Kon, Cicero Torteli
      Pages 10-18
    3. The Agile Journey

      • Jeff Nielsen, Dave McMunn
      Pages 28-37
  2. New Insights

    1. From User Stories to Code in One Day?

      • Michał Śmiałek
      Pages 38-47
    2. Evaluate XP Effectiveness Using Simulation Modeling

      • Alessandra Cau, Giulio Concas, Marco Melis, Ivana Turnu
      Pages 48-56
    3. Agile Security Using an Incremental Security Architecture

      • Howard Chivers, Richard F. Paige, Xiaocheng Ge
      Pages 57-65
    4. Quantifying Requirements Risk

      • Fred Tingey
      Pages 66-73
  3. Social Issues

    1. A Framework for Understanding the Factors Influencing Pair Programming Success

      • Mustafa Ally, Fiona Darroch, Mark Toleman
      Pages 82-91
    2. Empirical Study on the Productivity of the Pair Programming

      • Gerardo Canfora, Aniello Cimitile, Corrado Aaron Visaggio
      Pages 92-99
    3. The Social Side of Technical Practices

      • Hugh Robinson, Helen Sharp
      Pages 100-108
  4. Testing

    1. A Survey of Test Notations and Tools for Customer Testing

      • Adam Geras, James Miller, Michael Smith, James Love
      Pages 109-117
    2. Examining Usage Patterns of the FIT Acceptance Testing Framework

      • Kris Read, Grigori Melnik, Frank Maurer
      Pages 127-136
    3. Agile Test Composition

      • Rick Mugridge, Ward Cunningham
      Pages 137-144
  5. Tools

    1. E-TDD – Embedded Test Driven Development a Tool for Hardware-Software Co-design Projects

      • Michael Smith, Andrew Kwan, Alan Martin, James Miller
      Pages 145-153
    2. Multi-criteria Detection of Bad Smells in Code with UTA Method

      • Bartosz Walter, Błażej Pietrzak
      Pages 154-161
    3. An Eclipse Plugin to Support Agile Reuse

      • Frank McCarey, Mel Ó Cinnéide, Nicholas Kushmerick
      Pages 162-170

Other volumes

  1. Extreme Programming and Agile Processes in Software Engineering

Editors and Affiliations

  • Informatik og Matematisk Modellering, Danmarks Tekniske Universitet, Lyngby

    Hubert Baumeister

  • FlossLab s.r.l., Cagliari, Italy

    Michele Marchesi

  • Department of Computer Science, University of Sheffield, UK

    Mike Holcombe

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Access this book

Softcover Book JPY 7149
Price includes VAT (Japan)
  • Compact, lightweight edition
  • Dispatched in 3 to 5 business days
  • Free shipping worldwide -see info

Tax calculation will be finalised at checkout

Other ways to access


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