Book Details
•Paperback: 432 pages
•Publisher: Apress; 1 edition (August 5, 2003)
•Language: English
•ISBN-10: 1590590961
•ISBN-13: 978-1590590966
Book Description
…from my experience, most teams that say they’re doing XP don’t actually do the practices.
— Alistair Cockburn, Xp And The Cmm
Extreme Programming Refactored: The Case Against XP (featuring Songs of the Extremos) takes a satirical look at the increasingly hyped Extreme Programming methodology. It explores some quite astonishing Extremo quotes that have typified the XP approach quotes such as, “XPers are not afraid of oral documentation,” “Schedule is the customers problem,” “Dependencies between requirements are more a matter of fear than reality” and “Concentration is the Enemy.”
In between the chuckles, though, there is a serious analysis of XPs many flaws. The authors also examine C3, the first XP project, whose team (most of whom went on to get XP book deals shortly before C3s cancellation) described themselves as “the best team on the face of the Earth”. (In a later chapter, the authors also note that one problem which can affect pair programmers is overconfidence or is that “eXcessive courage”?). The authors examine whether the problems that led to C3s “inexplicable” cancellation could also afflict present-day XP projects.
In the final chapter (Refactoring XP) Matt and Doug suggest some ways of achieving the agile goals of XP using some XP practices (used in moderation) combined with other, less risk-laden methods.
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This just in from Slashdot.org: Take 2, six months later and still going strong!
See what reviewers at Slashdot.org originally had to say about Matt and Doug’s book!
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“Any one [XP] practice doesn’t stand well on its own (with the possible exception of testing). They require the other practices to keep them in balance.” – Kent Beck, Extreme Programming Explained, (Chapter 11)
“Well, from my experience, most teams that say they’re doing XP don’t actually do the practices.
“Houston, we have a problem.” – Jim Lovell, Apollo 13
Extreme Programming Refactored: The Case Against XP (featuring Songs of the Extremos) takes a satirical look at the increasingly hyped Extreme Programming methodology. It explores some quite astonishing Extremo quotes that have typified the XP approach— quotes such as, “XPers are not afraid of oral documentation,” “Schedule is the customer’s problem,” “Dependencies between requirements are more a matter of fear than reality” and “Concentration is the Enemy.”
In between the chuckles, though, there is a serious analysis of XP’s many flaws. The authors also examine C3, the first XP project, whose team (most of whom went on to get XP book deals shortly before C3’s cancellation) described themselves as “the best team on the face of the Earth”. (In a later chapter, the authors also note that one problem which can affect pair programmers is overconfidence— or is that “eXcessive courage”?). The authors examine whether the problems that led to C3’s “inexplicable” cancellation could also afflict present-day XP projects.
In the final chapter (Refactoring XP) Matt and Doug suggest some ways of achieving the agile goals of XP using some XP practices (used in moderation) combined with other, less risk-laden methods.” –>
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