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Extreme programming (XP) is a software development methodology intended to improve software quality and responsiveness to changing customer requirements. As a type of agile software development, [1] [2] [3] it advocates frequent releases in short development cycles, intended to improve productivity and introduce checkpoints at which new customer requirements can be adopted.
Class-responsibility-collaboration (CRC) cards are a brainstorming tool used in the design of object-oriented software. They were originally proposed by Ward Cunningham and Kent Beck as a teaching tool [1] but are also popular among expert designers [2] and recommended by extreme programming practitioners. [3]
ICONIX is a software development methodology which predates both the Rational Unified Process (RUP), Extreme Programming (XP) and Agile software development. Like RUP, the ICONIX process is UML Use Case driven but more lightweight than RUP. ICONIX provides more requirement and design documentation than XP, and aims to avoid analysis paralysis ...
The model can be simulated and can be exported to model checking tools. Full testing environment integrated based on TTCN-3. Prosa UML Modeller: Yes Yes Open modelbase Yes C++ Java, C#, SQL DDL and SQL queries C++ Java and C# class headers are synchronized between diagrams and code in real-time
Commercial. Free education edition, subscription model Java MagicDraw: No Magic, a Dassault Systèmes company Windows, Windows Server, Linux, Mac OS X (Java SE 11-compatible) [12] 1998 2022-07-01 (2022x) [13] No Commercial Java Microsoft Visio: Microsoft: Windows 1992 2016 (v16.0) No Commercial Unknown Modelio: Modeliosoft (SOFTEAM Group)
Unit testing is the cornerstone of extreme programming, which relies on an automated unit testing framework. This automated unit testing framework can be either third party, e.g., xUnit, or created within the development group. Extreme programming uses the creation of unit tests for test-driven development. The developer writes a unit test that ...
Kent Beck speaking in 2001. Kent Beck (born 1961) is an American software engineer and the creator of extreme programming, [1] a software development methodology that eschews rigid formal specification for a collaborative and iterative design process.
Extreme programming (XP) is an agile software development methodology used to implement software systems. This article details the practices used in this methodology. Extreme programming has 12 practices, grouped into four areas, derived from the best practices of software engineering. [1]