48,250 research outputs found
Adaptive development and maintenance of user-centric software systems
A software system cannot be developed without considering the various facets of its environment. Stakeholders â including the users that play a central role â have their needs, expectations, and perceptions of a system. Organisational and technical aspects of the environment are constantly changing. The ability to adapt a software system and its requirements to its environment throughout its
full lifecycle is of paramount importance in a constantly changing environment. The continuous involvement of users is as important as the constant evaluation of the system and the observation of evolving environments. We present a methodology for adaptive software systems development and
maintenance. We draw upon a diverse range of accepted methods including participatory design, software architecture, and evolutionary design. Our focus is on user-centred software systems
Towards a re-engineering method for web services architectures
Recent developments in Web technologies â in particular
through the Web services framework â have greatly enhanced the flexible and interoperable implementation of service-oriented software architectures. Many older Web-based and other distributed software systems will be re-engineered to a Web services-oriented platform. Using an advanced
e-learning system as our case study, we investigate central aspects of a re-engineering approach for the Web services platform. Since our aim is to provide components of the legacy system also as services in the new platform, re-engineering to suit the new development paradigm is as important as re-engineering to suit the new architectural requirements
Should I Bug You? Identifying Domain Experts in Software Projects Using Code Complexity Metrics
In any sufficiently complex software system there are experts, having a
deeper understanding of parts of the system than others. However, it is not
always clear who these experts are and which particular parts of the system
they can provide help with. We propose a framework to elicit the expertise of
developers and recommend experts by analyzing complexity measures over time.
Furthermore, teams can detect those parts of the software for which currently
no, or only few experts exist and take preventive actions to keep the
collective code knowledge and ownership high. We employed the developed
approach at a medium-sized company. The results were evaluated with a survey,
comparing the perceived and the computed expertise of developers. We show that
aggregated code metrics can be used to identify experts for different software
components. The identified experts were rated as acceptable candidates by
developers in over 90% of all cases
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