| Hollenbach, C., Frakes, W.: Software Process Reuse in an Industrial Setting, Fourth International Conference on Software Reuse, Orlando, Florida, IEEE Computer Society Press, Los Alamitos, CA (1996) |
....[Lubars92] Various approaches have been suggested to providing reusable software process models, where the software process can be adapted to the needs of the project. Process reuse has been described as the usage of one process description in the creation of another process description [Frakes96] Another approach to reuse software processes has involved using the answers to a series of questions to tailor a software process [Henninger98] 3.2. The spiral model The Spiral Model takes a different approach to software process reuse. The Spiral Model is a riskdriven process model ....
Frakes, W. and C. Hollenbach, "Software Process Reuse in an Industrial Setting", Proceedings of IEEE ICSR4, Orlando, April 1996.
....and their associated compilers, operating systems, software tools, commercial off the shelf systems, and so on. Informal cutting and pasting of previous development workproducts, particularly code, is widespread. And if the software which is reused can include development processes [Hollenbach and Frakes, 1996], knowledge [Basili and Rombach, 1991] previous versions of a developed system [Basili, 1990] and so on, it is not hard to see the ubiquity of reuse. Less common, however, are certain types of formalised systematic reuse , which are often based on product families , collections of related ....
C. Hollenbach and W. Frakes. Software process reuse in an industrial setting. In 4th Int. Conf. on Software Reuse, pages 22--30. IEEE Computer Society Press, 1996.
....has been used before. But few of these approaches have the concept of process reuse, the reuse of artifacts within the process, as a central objective of the methodology. While process reuse can be described as usage of one process description in the creation of another process description [19], it is also important to also consider the reuse of artifacts, procedures and documentation within those processes. In other words, if a defined process is being followed by projects in a software development organization, then similar artifacts are being constructed. Making those artifacts ....
....diverse set of users. While there will always be common elements, there needs to be methods to define when processes apply and when they do not. Representations are needed to describe the similarities and differences between projects for the purposes of determining when software processes apply [19]. Rapid change in technology and business needs ensures that unique situations will always be encountered. Methodologies are needed that can evolve with the changing development context. These methodologies must use feedback from development efforts to detect emerging needs for new processes and ....
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C. Hollenbach, W. Frakes, "Software Process Reuse in an Industrial Setting," Fourth International Conference on Software Reuse, Orlando, FL, 1996, IEEE Computer Society Press, Los Alamitos, CA, pp. 22-30.
....much research attention and industrial implementation. However, among all the software engineering concentration areas, reuse has the distinction of perhaps being the easiest to understand, while being the hardest to implement successfully. While there are documented software reuse success stories [9, 14, 19], there are also documented accounts of how reuse has failed to meet expectations [15] Reuse is sought to solve 3 significant problems in software: low quality, high cost and low productivity [30] Low quality is reflected in the fact that large software projects with 10,000 function points run a ....
Craig Hollenbach, and William Frakes, "Software process reuse in an industrial setting," Virginia Tech Computer Science Technical Report, TR-96-04, January, 1996.
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Hollenbach, C., Frakes, W.: Software Process Reuse in an Industrial Setting, Fourth International Conference on Software Reuse, Orlando, Florida, IEEE Computer Society Press, Los Alamitos, CA (1996)
No context found.
Hollenbach, C., Frakes, W.: Software Process Reuse in an Industrial Setting, Fourth International Conference on Software Reuse, Orlando, Florida, IEEE Computer Society Press, Los Alamitos, CA (1996)
No context found.
HOLLENBACH, C., AND FRAKES, W., Software process reuse in an industrial setting. In Proceedings of the Fourth International Conference on Software Reuse (Orlando, FL, April), IEEE Press. HUMPHREY, W.S. 1995. A Discipline for Software Engineering. Addison-Wesley.
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