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Loading... Practices of an Agile Developer: Working in the Real World (Pragmatic…by Venkat Subramaniam
Yay, "it's Code Complete for the Trainspotting generation".A load of good ideas/"best practices" condensed down into a couple of hundred pages. Probably not essential if you've read The Pragmatic Programmer, but a damn good read. I always enjoy the Pragmatic Programmers books (well, "Behind Closed Doors" wasn't great), and this book had a lot of good advice. I'm going to see whether I can start using a 'daylog' to keep track of solutions that I've come up with... |
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Perhaps this begins to sound a bit famliar: this is the language of the self-help book, the motivational speaker. This is the bland, trance-inducing jargon of the management seminar, the stuff that is sufficiently content free as to offer no grounds for objection (you can't object to nothing) and simultaneously justify anything.
Agile development may well be a useful mode in which to operate, and some of it seems quite interesting, but I would feel a little better about it if the people advocating it weren't so, well, creepy. (