I read and heard something extremely powerful which led me to share with you this link to the Implementation Patterns book interview with Kent Beck: http://www.infoq.com/interviews/beck-implementation-patterns. I wish to share with you one small sliver of insight said in this very inspirational and insightful interview.
In response to "XP is ...practice oriented.........patterns and XP and how they work together?", Kent Beck goes way beyond the question and shares beautiful Agile insights. Here is one insight:
He reminds us there are 3 things to consider with Agile Development; values, principles, and practices. He talks about being Agile and not just doing Agile practices.
In answer to a statement such as "XP was made for the people and not the other way around", I hope you and I remember that that is why Extreme Programming (XP) Principles are published too. They are in the XP white book and are listed in Martin Fowler's Bliki.
When a practice is not working for us in a particular context, Extreme Programming Principles are what we can retreat to. Sitting on our XP principles, we can figure out how to tweak a practice, replace a practice, drop a practice, or add a practice as we need to.
In that Implementation Patterns book interview mentioned above, Kent does a great job of telling us how we should step back and examine a practice in light of a principle. It's said in that interview, it's said in Martin Fowler's Bliki post ( http://martinfowler.com/bliki/PrinciplesOfXP.html ), and it is repeated here.
Hopefully, you and I will remember.
In response to "XP is ...practice oriented.........patterns and XP and how they work together?", Kent Beck goes way beyond the question and shares beautiful Agile insights. Here is one insight:
He reminds us there are 3 things to consider with Agile Development; values, principles, and practices. He talks about being Agile and not just doing Agile practices.
In answer to a statement such as "XP was made for the people and not the other way around", I hope you and I remember that that is why Extreme Programming (XP) Principles are published too. They are in the XP white book and are listed in Martin Fowler's Bliki.
When a practice is not working for us in a particular context, Extreme Programming Principles are what we can retreat to. Sitting on our XP principles, we can figure out how to tweak a practice, replace a practice, drop a practice, or add a practice as we need to.
In that Implementation Patterns book interview mentioned above, Kent does a great job of telling us how we should step back and examine a practice in light of a principle. It's said in that interview, it's said in Martin Fowler's Bliki post ( http://martinfowler.com/bliki/PrinciplesOfXP.html ), and it is repeated here.
Hopefully, you and I will remember.
2 comments:
Ron Jeffries and Kent Beck both do an excellent job of making XP more a like philosophy and less like a religion. Rather than simply prescribing tenets and commandments, they lay out the reasoning.
In the world of development methodologies, this is a breath of fresh air.
Well said! :) I like how Kent talks about people being empowered, responsible, and building their own stuff. This is in contrast to "tell me what to do oh great designer".
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