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Published Articles >> Table of Contents >> Abstract
2005 Australian Software Engineering Conference (ASWEC'05)
pp. 192-201
Adapting the Personal Software Process (PSP) to Formal Methods
Abdul Babar, University of New South Wales
John Potter, University of New South Wales
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DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/ASWEC.2005.12
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| Abstract |
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The goal of good software engineering practice is to deliver
reliable, high-quality software on-time and on-budget.
In this paper we advocate the combination of two modern
approaches towards achieving this goal. On the one hand,
with an eye to software quality, we consider adopting a
state-based formal development method, the B-method. In
terms of tool support and industry adoption, this is the most
advanced such method.
On the other, aimed at improving the development practices
of individual developers, we consider the adoption of
the Personal Software Process (PSP). To our knowledge this
combination of formal methods and PSP has not been considered
before; we term our special version of the combination
B-PSP. We present a re-design of the PSP data collection
and analysis tasks specifically geared towards the
B-Method. Although we support the general framework of
PSP, we also believe that developers do not enjoy having
their creative and thinking process being interrupted by the
need to regularly log activities.With this in mind, we present
the PSP tasks in a style which should be acceptable to B developers.
We view the results of this paper as a specification
for some of the data logging and analysis requirements
of a B-PSP-based development.
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Additional Information
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Citation:
Abdul Babar, John Potter,
"Adapting the Personal Software Process (PSP) to Formal Methods,"
aswec,
pp. 192-201,
2005 Australian Software Engineering Conference (ASWEC'05),
2005
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