Thursday, January 23, 2014

The Story of Agile Manifesto


You can find the full article here:

>>>
InformIT:
You were a co-author of the Agile Manifesto in 2001. What drew you to the gathering?
Bob: In 2000 I asked Martin Fowler to lunch to talk about the idea of a "Lightweight Process Summit." We were both part of the Extreme Programming movement, but we had seen that there were several other similar processes, most notably SCRUM, FDD, DSDM, and Crystal. We thought it would be a good idea to get the advocates of all those processes together with other industry leaders to see if there wasn't some way to find and define common ground. I suggested to Martin at the time that we might be able to create some kind of manifesto. He and I put an invitation list together. I composed the invitation and sent it out. After that the process took on a life of its own.
>>> ("Ten Years Of Agile: An Interview with Robert C. "Uncle Bob" Martin")

The idea (and the initiative) of a "Lightweight Process Summit" and of the manifesto that could define the common ground of that kind of movement belong to Robert C. Martin. "Uncle Bob" and Martin Fowler have created also the invitation list... The resulted manifesto is quite outstanding, at least for the ones that have good experience with software development and could serve as guidance for every practitioner.

Yes, we can say that all those methods are "implementing" these principles, but the great thing is that it was first the demonstration: methods and practices resulted from experience and proven to be working. This "theory" (the values and associated principles) are just the abstraction of real experience.

Thank you, Uncle Bob! :)

Note: "The Manifesto of Softwarecraftsmanship" has the same creator.

1 comment:

  1. Agile has a different sort of development and that is the way for growth for it necessarily, agile business is what that goes correct and comes finally as a right thing.So what you have written is a good thing.

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