Amalgamation of Personal Software Process in Software Development Practice
Keywords:
Personal Software, Process Software, Development Engineers, PSP ConceptsAbstract
Today, concern for quality has become an international movement. Even though most industrial organizations have now adopted modern quality principles, the software community has continued to rely on testing as the principal quality management method. Different decades have different trends in software engineering. The Personal Software Process (PSP) is an evolutionary series of personal software engineering techniques that an engineer learns and practices. A software process is nothing without the individual programmer. PSP a data driven process customized to teaching individuals about their programming styles, helping software engineers further develop their skills in developing quality software. Apart from discussing about PSP as a framework of techniques to help engineers and their organizations to improve their performance while simultaneously increasing product quality, in this paper, the Personal Software Process definition, principles, design, advantages and opportunities are explained focusing on the incorporation of PSP concepts in software development practice
Downloads
Metrics
References
Boehm, B. (1981). Software Engineering Economics. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall.
Fagan, M. (1976). Design and Code Inspections to Reduce Errors in Program Development. IBM Systems Journal 15:3.
Fagan, M. (1986). Advances in Software Inspections. IEEE Transactions on Software Engineering, SE- 12:7.
Humphrey, W. (1989). Managing the Software Process. Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley.
Humphrey, W. (1998). The Software Quality Index, Software Quality Professional.
Humphrey, W. (2002). Winning with Software: An Executive Strategy. Addison-Wesley, Boston.
Humphrey, W. (2005). PSP: A Self-Improvement Process for Software Engineers. Addison-Wesley, Upper Saddle River, NJ.
Paulk, M., Curtis, B., Chrissis, M. B. (1995). Capability Maturity Model for Software, Version 1.1 Pittsburgh, Pa. Software Engineering Institute, Carnegie Mellon University.
Pressman, R. (1992). Software Engineering: A Practitioner’s Approach. NewYork: McGraw-Hill.
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
License
Copyright (c) 2012 journal of Science, Technology and Arts Research
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
STAR © 2023 Copyright; All rights reserved