DocumentCode
1434685
Title
Pair programming on the C3 project
Author
Haungs, Jim
Author_Institution
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Rochester Inst. of Technol., NY, USA
Volume
34
Issue
2
fYear
2001
fDate
2/1/2001 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
118
Lastpage
119
Abstract
Chrysler\´s Comprehensive Compensation (C3) project was one of the first large-scale IT projects on which Extreme Programming (XP) precepts were attempted. As XP was being invented, we didn\´t really think of it as a theoretical or methodological breakthrough; it was simply an opportunity to get the job done. The "theory" came about later because of the practice\´s success. In my opinion, XP is not a theory, but a cogent descriptive body of successful praxis. Some people consider pair programming, an XP technique, to be difficult, unworkable, or downright weird. After all, what does the workstation represent, if not finally having your own computer? The idea of sharing your machine with someone seems like a lot of bother without much reward. How can you talk if you\´re trying to think? And how can you think if you first have to explain what you\´re thinking about? Having participated on the C3 project as a performance-tuning consultant beginning in 1996, I can attest to the success of pair programming. At the same time, I can show instances where it did not work or was not emphasized in this early XP project. In a sense, this pragmatism is the strength of XP: Use a technique where it works, ignore it where it doesn\´t. XP has never been prescribed as a panacea. XP\´s pair programming helps programmers synthesize their individual expertise into an effective combination
Keywords
programming; software engineering; C3 project; Chrysler´s Comprehensive Compensation project; Extreme Programming precepts; IT projects; pair programming; Concurrent computing; Programming profession; Registers; Relational databases; Runtime library; Software libraries; Statistics; Testing; User interfaces; Writing;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Computer
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9162
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/2.901173
Filename
901173
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