Ive never been a fan of stabilization sprints... they are the result of management not letting you add those tasks to the backlog like any other feature
@CharlieBrown - Ah okay so I assume this means that the developers have enough say in the schedule to push back on sales when they overcommit on deadlines.
Stories should be "User can delete a product from the website" and instead they tend to be "Make a control panel that has a list of all items and each item should have an edit and delete button and each...blah blah blah"
@SpencerRuport code debt is pretty much depending on how much the tech side can interrelate with business decision. a weak forever "yessir" tech lead can really lead to exponential debt
funny part is the larger an organization is, the less tech leaders dares to say something like "no, this timeline is not going to work", "no, we cannot ignore this part"
I like to choose Agile VS waterfall based on team skills. More Novice team is better suited to waterfall, a more experienced team is better suited to Agile... although with coaching, code reviews, pairing I would still choose agile
@CharlieBrown, @Pheonixblade9 - So in your opinions, how would Agile handle something like a significant technology change. Say ASP.Net Forms to MVC for example. What aspects of Agile might come into play, (if any) with that transition?
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@TravisJ, @Pheonixblade9, @CharlieBrown - Would you guys disagree if I said "Ultimately the problem of code debt is that it produces uncertainty and what certainty exists becomes highly fractured."
@SpencerRuport - I think that there are too many problems with code debt to narrow it down to one narrow point. I think that your statement is accurate though, but I don't think that is ultimately the problem with code debt.
@Jeremy yes, although we have slackers. On this project, I lead the front end development, so I require my team to always have tests... on the backend code... well, its hit or miss
@SpencerRuport the problem with code debt is that it makes future projects more expensive. It's cheaper to fix the code debt than to ignore it and let it get worse. And money is what matters.
@Pheonixblade9 - I agree. I was just trying to explain why it makes it more expensive. Everything I can think of like bad estimates, difficulty bringing on new developers, bugs etc all seem to point to uncertainty in the code base IMO.
Code debt is like cancer. At first, it may be small and in one place. But over time it creeps out, grows larger where it started and begins shooting off as small pieces in other places just waiting to grow.
Tuberculosis, that's pretty extreme. I guess that could just mean that Texas f.e. is extremely unremarkable and just happens to have a slightly higher rate of TB
@Jeremy - Yeah, I looked into fiber when I was thinking of starting a company. I found that it was cheaper to get 8 simultaneous lines of cable which performs rather similarly.
in the natural progression of things, leetspeak has become derpspeak :P
related to the http issue: the reason IE had so many vulnerabilities is because when browsers were first invented they supported every protocol. IE had so much legacy code in it, that even though no one used the old protocols, it still supported them and as a result there were still paths to execute code on the system runtime by exploiting those old protocol hooks. In order to refactor this support they needed to completely gut the IE code base. #projectspartan #msedge
Hello.. i need some advice.. i want to develop android applications and i dont want to use xamarin .. thinking to switch to java .. but for my surprise i see vs 2015 gonna support android and IOS.. does that they integrate java sdk into vs?
In database management systems following the relational model, a junction table is a database table that contains common fields from two or more other database tables within the same database. It is the standard way of creating a many-to-many relationship between tables.
In most database systems, only one-to-one or one-to-many relationships between data tables can be created directly, usually by utilizing foreign keys. The Foreign Key (FK) usually is a Primary Key (PK) of another table and thus a unique constraint.
A junction table maps two or more tables together by referencing the primary keys...
junction table is a database table that contains common fields from two or more other database tables within the same database. It is the standard way of creating a many-to-many relationship between tables
I'm having a brain fart, if I have two variables that come across. One is CallForPricing the other is CallForPricingGuest. How can I make sure a true for CallForPricing isn't triggered for a CallForPricingGuest.
Never mind.
Figured it out, Equals failed due to ; at the end.