• DocumentCode
    1356340
  • Title

    Doubt and Software Standards

  • Author

    Glass, Robert L.

  • Author_Institution
    Griffith Univ., QLD, Australia
  • Volume
    26
  • Issue
    5
  • fYear
    2009
  • Firstpage
    104
  • Lastpage
    104
  • Abstract
    Software standards. Now there\´s a subject that brooks no "loyal opposition," right? Standards are material provided by some software god, biblically significant, subject to no doubt? In recent years I\´ve come to question all that.In 2006, my colleague Johann Rost wrote a guest Loyal Opposition column on the standard for requirements documents. He explained that at the conceptual level he understood the standard quite well, but at the implementation level he found it impossible to follow. I offered him sympathy, hosted his column here, and sort of forgot about it. Time passed. Another colleague, Barbara Kitchenham, was beginning to struggle with certain software standards. One standard gave "inappropriate advice for measuring software engineering processes." Another standard was "not suitable for measuring the design quality of a software product." Echoing Johann\´s concerns, Barbara commented that "experienced designers will be able to construct a number of different interpretations of the standard, implying that [it] is not a standard at all." Barbara pointed me at yet another critic of software standards, Magne Jorgensen. He noted that one standard for software quality "requires quality measurement and at the same time admits that there are no (universally) accepted quality measures".
  • Keywords
    software quality; software standards; design quality; quality measurement; requirements documents; software engineering process; software product; software quality; software standard; software engineering; software standards;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Software, IEEE
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0740-7459
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/MS.2009.126
  • Filename
    5222806