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Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Agile Methods, Inversion of Control, Emergent Behavior

I've run in to some Agility questions recently.  Questions that indicate that some people just don't like the Inversion of Control aspect of Agile methods.

We used to call IoC "Emergent Behavior".  The system isn't designed from top-down to fill specific use cases.  Instead, the system is designed so that the interaction of various objects will fill the use cases.  Overall control does not reside in one place.

An Agile project is the same phenomenon.  We're not going to plan the entire effort.  Instead, we're going to do some things that -- in the long run -- will lead to more useful software.

Agile Question 1

"Why focus on a few use cases up front?  If we do that, then new requirements will arrive as we develop, leading to endless rework.  Why can't we enumerate all use cases now?"

Right and Wrong.  Right: we will do endless rework.  Wrong: we will deliver something that works before starting the rework cycle.  

For some reason, focus on a use case is really hard.  Some people feel that they can't build "just enough" software, but must completely understand every nuance before they can do anything.

I think this is a paralyzing fear of failure, coupled with bad experiences from management that equated all rework with failure.

The Agile approach of "build something now" is trumped by their personal failure/rework issues, leading to bizarre designs that include lots of things that aren't in the use case under construction.  It leads to lots of "why are you doing this?" conversations with lots of "it might be needed in the future."

It isn't needed now.  Let it go.  Merely having thought of it, and leaving a stub in the design, is enough for now.  When faced with "attribute vs. property vs. method" questions, those future considerations can help steer you to one or the other.  But don't give in to designing and building the future.  Just leave space for it.

An Agile approach is about an emergent behavior.  It's built from the edges in.  There's an inversion of control here.

Agile Question 2

"Can't you just add a button that says X?  You're supposed to be Agile, why can't you just add this button to the page?"  

First, we're not done with what you asked for two weeks ago.  Until that's done and approved, we're not on speaking terms.

But, more importantly, "adding a button" isn't part of any existing use case.  You're not changing priorities with this request, you're making stuff up.  

Making stuff up isn't bad, per se.  Making up a random piece of behavior, with no actor, no goal, and no business value is bad.  Who will click that button?  What will the business purpose be?  What result will help that person make a decision and take action?

"It's just to show a customer."  Good start.  What's the customer's role?  What do they do?  Are we showing the customer's sales folks how they use this application?  Are we showing the customer's finance folks how they use this application?  Are we showing the operational folks?  Are we showing the underwriting folks?  In short, "who's the actor?"

An Agile approach is about building software someone can use.  Without a use case, we're just building software haphazardly.  A use case isn't an elaborate document, it's just an actor with a goal who interacts with the system to create something of value.  Four simple clauses.

From the use case, we can work out an implementation.  There is no "inversion of control" when moving from requirements to design.   The requirements do not emerge from the design.

1 comment:

  1. Wonderful blog & good post.Its really helpful for me, awaiting for more new post. Keep Blogging!





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