DocumentCode
1460348
Title
Perfectionists in a World of Finite Resources
Author
Shull, Forrest
Volume
28
Issue
2
fYear
2011
Firstpage
4
Lastpage
6
Abstract
The metaphor of technical debt, originally coined by Ward Cunninghamhas helped me recently get a handle on this type of issue. Almost invariably in software projects, developers can be so focused on accomplishing the needed functionality that the software itself grows less understandable, more complex, and harder to modify. Since this system deterioration usually reflects a lack of activity spent in refactoring, documentation, and other aspects of the project infrastructure, we can view it as a kind of debt that developers owe the system. Ward Cunningham´s metaphor helps make clear an important trade-off: although a little debt can speed up software development in the short run, this benefit is achieved at the cost of extra work in the future, as if paying interest on the debt. Technical debt gives us a frame work for thinking about the fact that not doing some good things today, no matter how valuable they seem on their own merits, allows us to invest in other good things. In short, there are always trade-offs in life.
Keywords
software maintenance; software development; software projects; software refactoring; system deterioration; technical debt; code decay; code smells; software engineering; software maintainability; technical debt;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Software, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0740-7459
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/MS.2011.38
Filename
5720703
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