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Agile software development methods recommend the use of Planning Poker for estimating the size of user stories and developing release and iteration plans. [ 1 ] The method was first defined and named by James Grenning in 2002 [ 2 ] and later popularized by Mike Cohn in the book Agile Estimating and Planning , [ 3 ] whose company trade marked ...
In software development and product management, a user story is an informal, natural language description of features of a software system. They are written from the perspective of an end user or user of a system , and may be recorded on index cards, Post-it notes , or digitally in specific management software. [ 1 ]
Software sizing or software size estimation is an activity in software engineering that is used to determine or estimate the size of a software application or component in order to be able to implement other software project management activities (such as estimating or tracking).
Use case points (UCP or UCPs) is a software estimation technique used to forecast the software size for software development projects. UCP is used when the Unified Modeling Language (UML) and Rational Unified Process (RUP) methodologies are being used for the software design and development.
This is a method for analysis and measurement of information processing applications based on end user functional view of the system. The MK II Method (ISO/IEC 20968 Software engineering—Mk II Function Point Analysis—Counting Practices Manual [1]) is one of five currently recognized ISO standards for Functionally sizing software.
Function point analysis measures the size of the software deliverable from a user's perspective. Function point sizing is done based on user requirements and provides an accurate representation of both size for the developer/estimator and value (functionality to be delivered) and reflects the business functionality being delivered to the customer.
While SLOC is an accepted way of measuring the absolute size of code from the developer's perspective, metrics such as function points capture software size functionally from the user's perspective. The function-based sizing (FBS) metric extends function points so that hidden parts of software such as complex algorithms can be sized more readily.
The INVEST mnemonic for Agile software development projects was created by Bill Wake [1] as a reminder of the characteristics of a good quality Product Backlog Item (commonly written in user story format, but not required to be) or PBI for short. Such PBIs may be used in a Scrum backlog, Kanban board or XP project.