| : Dart, Susan A. & Ellison, Robert J. & Feiler, Peter H. & Habermann, A. Nico: Software Development Environments, IEEE Computer, November 1987. |
....and Kron define Programming in theLarge (PitL) and form a theory for it. Since then almost 20 years have passed and as described above some problems have been solved in other contexts and some new problems have appeared on the horizon. Many of these problems have a different nature and Dart et al. [14] coin the term Programming in the Many (PitM) to cover some of these new aspects. They do not give a precise definition, though, of what is covered by the term. In this paper we want to re define PitL on the basis of the developments of the last 20 years. Furthermore, we want to precisely define ....
....What he intends by the activity of program administration is for the most part what we have defined as PitL above. There is, however, also the suggestion that there are some different problems caused not by the size of the system but by the involvement of many programmers (as noted also in [14]) In fact DeMarco [33] claims that the project s sociology will be more important to eventual success or failure [of a project] than the project s technology. We claim is that this new territory can not and should not be contained within the same conceptual framework as PitL, and we do this ....
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: Dart, Susan A. & Ellison, Robert J. & Feiler, Peter H. & Habermann, A. Nico: Software Development Environments, IEEE Computer, November 1987.
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