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by Martin Fowler.
Original Post: Bliki: Semat
Feed Title: Martin Fowler's Bliki
Feed URL: http://martinfowler.com/feed.atom
Feed Description: A cross between a blog and wiki of my partly-formed ideas on software development
SEMAT (Software Engineering Method and Theory) is
an effort initiated by Ivar Jacobson, Bertrand Meyer, and Richard
Soley. Its stated aim is to "refound software engineering based on a
solid theory, proven principles and best practices". Like many
notorious people in the software world I was invited to
participate. Thus far I've declined and feel the need to explain why.
The call for action seemed
somewhat vague to me. Although it derided fads and fashions, it
seemed very much like a fashion statement itself. To better
understand what was going on I took a further look at some of the
initial publications in Dr Dobb's Journal. From here I got the
distinct impression that the central thrust of the initiative is to
create a software meta-method-kernel - essentially a set of common
process elements for software developments that you can rigorously
compose into a method for your own project.
At this point I lost interest. I spent a fair bit of time in the
80's and 90's mucking around with this idea. In the end I decided
that it was too hard and of limited value. Why this is so was
primarily crystallized for me by Alistair Cockburn who explained
that since people are the central element in software development,
and people are inherently non-linear and unpredictable - such an
effort is fundamentally doomed. Or at least it is until people
become predictable agents that can be described with tractable
mathematics - for which event I'm not holding my breath.
My views have since gone along the lines that software process is
a much more multi-faceted thing than what a meta-method-kernel would
usefully describe. Alistair's work on describing methods strikes me
as a much more realistic approach.
Alistair actually did get involved in SEMAT and attended their
inaugural meeting. His decision to withdraw further
reinforces my lack of interest to participate myself.