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Articles

Exploring the Subtle Differences Between Agile Paradigms
In recent years within the object oriented and agile community, several approaches to software design and development have materialized and are in use by professional software developers. Test-Driven Development (TDD), Domain-Driven Design (DDD), Behavior-Driven Design (BDD) and Feature-Driven Design (FDD) are some of the more well known approaches. While these philosophies all imbibe the classic agile principles of an incremental and iterative mindset to software development, they subtly differ from each other.
Revisiting Refactoring
Refactoring is one of the cornerstones of the technical agile development practices. It is the mechanism that allows the design and architecture of a system to evolve over time. It is one third of the red-green-refactor loop and the core of test-driven development (TDD). But does it really deliver on its promises?
Lean-Agile Traceability: Strategies and Solutions
For some lean/agile practitioners, the idea of maintaining traceability among different development artifacts is nonsense. However, there are times when traceability is required and other times when it's highly valuable. We need to develop a value mindset of transparency in our processes and approach, such that traceability requirements can be satisfied with the least effort needed.
Ping-Pong Programming: Enhance Your TDD and Pair Programming Practices
Team player Dave Hoover wants to share a software development practice he enjoys. It emerged from the practices of extreme programming as a competitive yet simultaneously collaborative practice. Dave has found that this practice promotes the flow of knowledge between software developers better than any other practice he has experienced. As you might have guessed from the title of this week's column, this practice is called ping-pong programming, or P3 for short.

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