Modeling software development practices using reusable project patterns: a case study

2013 ◽  
Vol 26 (3) ◽  
pp. 339-349 ◽  
Author(s):  
Diego Martín ◽  
Javier García Guzmán ◽  
Julián Urbano ◽  
Antonio Amescua
Author(s):  
Renata Souza ◽  
Karla Malta ◽  
Roselane Silva ◽  
Paulo Masiero ◽  
Eduardo Almeida ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mahugnon Honore Houekpetodji ◽  
Nicolas Anquetil ◽  
Stephane Ducasse ◽  
Fatiha Djareddir ◽  
Jerome Sudich

Author(s):  
Honoré Houékpétodji Mahugnon ◽  
Anquetil Nicolas ◽  
Ducasse Stéphane ◽  
Djareddir Fatiha ◽  
Sudich Jerome

Author(s):  
Kiran Saeed ◽  
Yaser Hafeez ◽  
Sadia Ali ◽  
Muhammad Usman Shahid ◽  
Naila Iqbal

Many agile software development practices are promoted to improve the quality of software products. In recent years agile software development overlooked the usability features that effected system productivity.Usability is a main feature of interaction. Interaction is a way of a farming relationship between people and designed objects. An interactive model provides the way to band application together to achieve target user’s need. Usability gained attention of researchers and engineers because of its own importance. Agile software methods and usability engineering played a major role for producing better and reliable products, because both of them are concepts of methods as well as practices. The purpose of this research was to highlight the need of usability practices. The proposed model demonstrates that usability heuristics were much compatible with agile methodologies and would help to improve its productivity by reducing time and cost. Action research was applied for the development of framework proposed. The framework was evaluated using case study and further results were compared with existing related work.


2015 ◽  
Vol 101 ◽  
pp. 124-135 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tero Päivärinta ◽  
Kari Smolander

2014 ◽  
Author(s):  
C.J.. J. Segnini ◽  
M.. Rashwan ◽  
M.J.. J. Hernandez ◽  
J. A. Rojas ◽  
M.A.. A. Infante

Abstract This paper presents a methodology for the probabilistic analysis of an infill or step-out opportunity using numerical simulation. Sensitivity and uncertainty analyses for all involved parameters were evaluated through different experimental design techniques. Subsequently, a proxy model was established to reproduce the numerical model performance. Finally, three appropriate solutions were selected from a large population of realizations corresponding to probabilistic percentiles (90%, 50%, and 10% certainty that the specified volume will be recovered). This proposed methodology helped the asset team to evaluate the well candidates more precisely, confidently, and in less time than the current standard methodology. More knowledge about the variables and their effects on overall outcomes was also gained, which helped the team make more-informed decisions. The workflow used the same numerical modeling software, incorporating and facilitating the changes of both static and dynamic properties simultaneously. A case study from Teak field, on the east coast of Trinidad, illustrates the applicability of the methodology and compares its results to those obtained using the standard workflow for the asset. The methodology is one of the latest developments in reservoir simulation, and it has not yet been incorporated into the operator's common practices and procedures for exploitation of the TSP fields.


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