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The Agile Developer's Handbook

You're reading from   The Agile Developer's Handbook Get more value from your software development: get the best out of the Agile methodology

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781787280205
Length 398 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Concepts
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Author (1):
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Paul Flewelling Paul Flewelling
Author Profile Icon Paul Flewelling
Paul Flewelling
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Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. The Software Industry and the Agile Manifesto 2. Agile Software Delivery Methods and How They Fit the Manifesto FREE CHAPTER 3. Introducing Scrum to your Software Team 4. Gathering Agile User Requirements 5. Bootstrap Teams with Liftoffs 6. Metrics that will Help your Software Team Deliver 7. Software Technical Practices are the Foundation of Incremental Software Delivery 8. Tightening Feedback Loops in the Software Development Life Cycle 9. Seeking Value – How to Deliver Better Software Sooner 10. Using Product Roadmaps to Guide Software Delivery 11. Improving Our Team Dynamics to Increase Our Agility 12. Baking Quality into Our Software Delivery 13. The Ultimate Software Team Member 14. Moving Beyond Isolated Agile Teams 15. Other Books You May Enjoy

Why User Stories produce results

To avoid Big Bang integration and delivery right at the end that we get with waterfall and Water-Scrum-Fall, we have to change the way we do requirement gathering, analysis, and design. The aim of a User Story is to break requirements down into discrete chunks of work that will realize some business value in their own right. While it's not always possible to deliver a single User Story in isolation, the aim is to make them as independent as possible.

In fact, independent is the first attribute of the mnemonic INVEST, which we use when discussing the attributes of a good User Story. The letters of INVEST stand for the following:

  • Independent: Avoid creating dependencies; if we have dependencies between User Stories, we'll create unfinished work, meaning we'll have to wait for other work to complete, before what we're working...
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