Software Metrics: A Guide to Planning, Analysis, and Application
β Scribed by C. Ravindranath Pandian
- Publisher
- Auerbach Publications
- Year
- 2003
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 307
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The modern field of software metrics emerged from the computer modeling and ''statistical thinking'' services of the 1980s. As the field evolved, metrics programs were integrated with project management, and metrics grew to be a major tool in the managerial decision-making process of software companies. Now practitioners in the software industry have a reference that validates software metrics as a crucial tool for efficient and successful project management and execution.Software Metrics: A Guide to Planning, Analysis, and Application simplifies software measurement and explains its value as a pragmatic tool for management. Ideas and techniques presented in this book are derived from best practices. The ideas are field-proven, down to earth, and straightforward, making this volume an invaluable resource for those striving for process improvement. This overview helps readers enrich their knowledge of measurements and analysis, best practices, and how ordinary analysis techniques can be applied to achieve extraordinary results. Easy-to-understand tools and methods are applied to demonstrate how metrics create models that are indispensable to decision-making in the software industry.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
<P>Going where no book on software measurement and metrics has previously gone, this critique thoroughly examines a number of bad measurement practices, hazardous metrics, and huge gaps and omissions in the software literature that neglect important topics in measurement. The book covers the major g
1. Introduction -- 2. Semigroupoids and groupoids -- 3. Quantitative metrization theory -- 4. Applications to analysis on quasimetric spaces -- 5. Nonlocally convex functional analysis -- 6. Functional analysis on quasi-pseudonormed groups
Does MEMS technology offer advantages to your company's products? Will miniature machines on a chip solve your application objectives for Γ΄smaller, better, cheaper, and faster'ΓΆ If you are a product development engineer or manager, the decision to design a MEMS device implies having an application a
<p>MEMS are rapidly moving from the research laboratory to the marΒ ketplace. Many market studies indicate not only a tremendous market potential of MEMS devices; year by year we see the actual market grow as the technology matures. In fact, these days, many large silicon foundries have a MEMS group