Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byTheodore Horn Modified over 9 years ago
1
The Personal Software Process Alan Kelon Oliveira de Moraes alan@kelon.org May 15, 2006 - Recife
2
To do an effective job, you need to... ● Plan your work ● Do your work according to this plan ● Strive to produce the highest quality products
3
Personal Software Process (PSP) ● It is a disciplined way of writing software which can lead to dramatic improvements in – the quality of the software you write – your productivity – the quality of your plans and estimates. ● Following a discipline like this can lead to greater self-knowledge, a valuable thing in itself
4
Personal Software Process (PSP) ● It shows how to apply advanced engineering methods to their daily tasks ● Provides detailed estimating and planning methods ● Shows how to track sw engineers' performance against these plans ● Explains how defined process can guide their work ● Will lead you away from random hacking and towards professional software engineering
5
Keywords ● Responsible ● Repeatable ● Informed ● Rational ● Aware ● Mature
6
PSP is not... ● a Silver Bullet solution ● a radically different approach to development
7
PSP is ● a framework that allows detailed planning and tracking of project status ● a vehicle to collect “in process” metrics to provide insight and opportunities to improvement ● a way to protect development steps needed to “build in” quality
8
Benefits ● PSP has the potential to increase your effectiveness as a programmer dramatically ● The data you collect and the conclusions you infer from them can empower you in negotiations with your boss ● Deeper benefits are possible too. Any self- knowledge has the potential to lead to personal growth
9
Best practices ● Task breakdown (detailed planning) ● Time alloted to Design ● Size estimation methods ● Time alloted to Review/Inspection ● Time tracking ● Defect tracking ● Metric analysis ● Coding standards
10
What does PSP provide? ● Measurements – Size – Time – Defects
11
Time estimating error
12
Defect Level Improvement
13
Productivity Results
14
PSP processes
15
PSP Process Flow
16
Time management ● You will likely spend your time this week much the way you spent time last week ● To make realistic plans, you have to track way you spend time ● To check the accuracy of your time estimates and plans, you must document them and latter compare them with what you actually do
17
Time management ● To make more accurate plans, determine where your previous plans where in error and what you could have done better ● To manage your time, plan your time and them follow the plan
18
Tracking time ● Categorize your major activities ● Record the time spent on each major activity ● Record time in a standard way ● Keep the time data in a convenient place ● Hint: – When you occasionally forget to record the start time, stop time, or interrupt duration, make an estimate as soon as you remember
21
Period planning ● A period plan concerns the way you plan to spend time during the period (day, week, month) ● The weekly Activity Summary
24
Product planning ● The product planning is based on an activity, like developing a program or writing a report ● The Job Number Log
25
Program size
26
Managing your time ● Decide how you want to spend your time ● Make a time budget ● Track the way you spend time against this budget ● Decide what changes to make to bring your actions into agreement with the budget ● Prioritize your time
27
Managing commitments ● A true commitment requires an explicit agreement between two or more parties on: – what will be done – the criteria for determining that it is done – who will do it – when it will be done – the compensation or other consideration to be given in return – and who will provide this compensation or consideration
28
Managing commitments ● Analyze the job before agreeing to the commitment ● Support the commitment with a plan ● Document the agreement ● If unable to meet the commitment, promptly tell the other part and try to minimize the impact on the that person
29
Managing commitments ● The consequences of not managing commitments – work required exceeds time available – Failure to meet commitments – Misplaced priorities – Poor quality of work – Loss of trust – Loss of respect for your judgment
30
Managing schedules ● Make a project schedule ● Checkpoints ● Track project plan
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.