In this vein, this paper is worth a read. "Subject-oriented programming" - https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/bdb2/ed51f2d471c730aea28b3692f63d5c478e0b.pdf …
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The entire requirements engineering and architecture sub-disciplines of software engineering deal almost exclusively with these issues.
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Replying to @etscrivner @ctbeiser
Yes! But, at least when I was in school (late Victorian era) requirements analysis was not taught. Has this changed?
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Replying to @Meaningness @etscrivner
I had a class on "Software Development" that was actually about requirements engineering—but not explicitly. The process was as follows:
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is there recommended reading on requirements engineering?
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If you want an actual book on the subject this is a decent intro - https://www.amazon.com/Software-Requirements-Developer-Best-Practices/dp/0735679665 …
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Replying to @etscrivner @The_Lagrangian and
The problem is the software industry itself is at war as to whether or not these are useful practices
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Replying to @etscrivner @The_Lagrangian and
Both sides are usually pretty ignorant of the case or actual practices of the other side
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Is this division between engineering and marketing people? Or along some different lines?
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"Why did the Soviet Union's planned economy fail?" "Because the Russians did it." It's a bit like this, I think.
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Yes; at risk of elitism, competent teams can make any method work, and incompetent teams can’t make any method work.
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I'd slightly disagree. Having worked in the safety critical industry, some systems are just so complex competency becomes irrelevant.
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