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Have We Finished Yet?

by Suzanne Robertson

In his keynote talk on dependable software at the 2005 Requirements engineering conference, Daniel Jackson’s urged us to “move away from infatuation with completeness”. This started me wondering – how often does anyone ever finish anything? In our everyday lives we say we have finished cleaning the bathroom, cooking the dinner, watering the garden, ironing the shirt, cleaning our teeth and a myriad of other things. But we don’t really mean that we have finished. Instead we mean that we do not have any more time to devote to that task and we have done the best that we can within that constraint. We accept the fact that we have limited time and that few of life’s daily tasks are finished to one hundred per cent perfection. Why should building software systems be any different?

A common complaint of software developers is that they don’t have enough time to finish a project. People in other professions for example engineers, architects, doctors, composers have the same problem but they have learnt to treat this as a normal constraint of their profession. They accept that:

  • there will always be more to do than fits into the time available
  • dynamics of the world mean that there will be changes that necessitate negotiation and replanning
  • they need to be able to communicate their plans to their clients.

This perspective is about how software developers can use these principles to free themselves from “infatuation with completeness”.

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Have We Finished Yet.pdf183.88 KB

How many ....

Thanks for your views Scott!

The number of grey hairs I have, proove the number of fights I have been engaged in... and lost. Do you walk away (the purist passionate approach) or do you try to mitigate where you started? I am not saying do not try, but I am asking what to do when in some instances you can only make it better gradually.

How many situtations did you have where you were convincing to affect the change you describe above?
My last experience: 5 companies - 5 different roles; the one person these companies bring to the first meeting together with the sponsor is not a requirements engineer (I wasn't there;-), but a lawyer.

- Thomas

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