Julien Delhomme’s Blog

September 30, 2007

JAOO2007 – Professional Developer (Part IV)

Filed under: JAOO, Software Craftsmanship — Julien @ 10:00 pm

Part IV: Ilja Preuss – Find the Inner Doll

It is difficult to find a good definition of being a professional… Be paid for what you doing? Doing something for money? L
Ilja proposed us a metaphor about being a professional to answer what does it means.
Matrioshka: metaphor of the generations of a family. Layers of a developer / Thinking in layer.

The skills doll: your techniques, your tools, your material
The values doll (e.g. for precision mechanic: safety, appropriate precision, economy, cleanliness)
The wisdom doll: Why should I care? Perhaps to gain wisdom
The nurture doll: nurturing and that which has been lived
The inner doll is personal (spiritual?)

How to teach? Not explicitly… just be a right model.

I was touched by the performance of Ilja, and his personality. He seems to be someone discreet and prudish. He undressed the doll layer after layer. At the end, he just let us perceive the inner doll. That incited me to think to a fascinating work of introspection [just be a right model, catharsis].
This presentation was one of the most badly received. Ilja gave us material to think on. Obviously, not everybody was here to make such efforts L ["prêt-à-penser"].

JAOO2007 – Professional Developer (Part III)

Filed under: JAOO, Software Craftsmanship — Julien @ 9:57 pm

Part III: Laurent Bossavit – A journeyman’s tale

Second session of the track “Professional Developer”

Laurent established a parallel between ancient craftsman’s guilds – especially French “Compagnonnage“, cathedral builders and other workers federations since the end XIth century – and software craft community: constituent parts of their identity (traditions, legacy of values, networking structure, tools…) can be recognized in software development or project management. These associations claim mutual help, sharing, continuous improvement and transmission of skills and knowledge.

Actually, I like the social aspect of the idea (e.g. acquisition of skills by imitation and mentoring and the need for recognition of our work from the others… these things that deals with ego and society [mimesis, alterity]) but I was not totally convinced by the whole presentation… I am not sure some aspects of the comparison can apply very deeply. Others seem too universal. Lot of people walked out during the presentation, probably too focused on historical details or because they couldn’t recognize themselves in the comparison.

A point of view can be disputed – and actually, during the presentation, it was! Laurent seemed to suggest that teaching computer science at university was worthless.
The problems of education and learning returned many times during the conference. I already mentioned Bob Martin saying “unfortunately being a good developer is not taught at school” (see Professional Developer Part I).

In the industry, the lack of theoretical knowledge is obvious. Theoretical instruction must be emphasized at university as well as at high schools. Teach an implementation of an object-oriented technology (Java, C#, whatever) for example or any product is insufficient and reductive. Teach abstractions, concepts. Teach that there is something beyond objects! University as a special role to play and that’s why university is essential. Research is essential. If there is a place where software development can be a Science, it is at university, isn’t it? Productivity is the driving force behind industry. University should allow thinking out of normative power of industry and fashions.
This recall me how I was surprised when I read in James Coplien’s thesis (Multi-Paradigm Design) that “[Bjarne] Stroustrup has never called C++ an object-oriented programming language”.

JAOO2007 – Professional Developer (Part II)

Filed under: Agile, JAOO, Software Craftsmanship — Julien @ 9:48 pm

Part II: Kevlin Henney – With Economy and Elegance

Wednesday morning, Kevlin Henney opened the track on “Professional Developer”.
He really is a pleasant speaker. After the success of this first session, his following session “Performance Art” was full.
These are the main points of his speech:

Definitions
“Our job is to turn a general purpose machine into a specific one”
A nice quote: the client: “I would like something… general. (J). Be able to… do lots of different things…” – “Ok. Take a compiler!”

It is natural for any discipline to define itself by analogy with others (metaphors), however the notion of is like is not the same as is (need for breaking the metaphor).
The mistake has not been in treating software development as a kind of engineering but…

  • But in assuming that is was a form of physical engineering (it is a kind of informational engineering)
  • But in assuming that engineering was synonymous with plan driven (i.e. imposition of rigid plans)
  • But in assuming a caricature of other engineering disciplines to compare against and mimic
  • But in assuming that there was no art, craft or sense of aesthetics in engineering

An Emerging Discipline
Problem: Software has been unreasonably successful! There was money, no time for consolidation.
But after a period of expansion and experimentation, we are in a period of consolidation…
With a stable base to build on:

  • Classic topics of computer science
  • Commoditized tools and libraries
  • Patterns for capturing and communicating software architecture and development experience

With clearer thinking about how people work

An Emerging Professionalism
A clearer sense of responsibility
Ways to form communities (discussion groups, open source projects, conferences)

Shared Understanding?

Then, Kevlin began to talk about “Economy and Elegance”:
Economy and elegance are not arbitrary or whimsical concerns.

  • Effective software development involves more than just a focus on functional and operational behavior
  • Recognizing that these qualities have value is part of professionalism

Sufficiency

  • Overachieving, speculative design is weaker and more complex, not stronger and simpler
  • Clarity, ease of use and performance are often achieved by reducing both clutter and hedging

Essential versus Accidental Complexity
Complexity comes from many sources, not all of which are necessary:

  • Sometimes the problem domain is complex, which may dictate complexity in the solution
  • Sometimes it is misunderstanding or insufficient skill that creates complexity
  • Sometimes it is cleverness that creates the complexity — code by über-programmers is often based on speculative generality and gratuitous use of advanced techniques and language features

Avoid Design by committee.

Decremental development

  • Eliminate Waste (Lean Development),
  • Don’t Repeat Yourself (Pragmatic Programming),
  • Once and Once Only (Extreme Programming),
  • Omit Needless Code and Unify Duplicate Code (Programmer’s Dozen)

Refactoring, encapsulation, conversation and libraries help in the search for the minimum. These are hill-descending techniques.
Refactoring is gradual, stable and Goal Oriented.

The Value of Economy
Economy represents care, far-sightedness and elimination of waste (in code & in process)
It is not a principle on its own, but a consideration with many consequent benefits

  • If you want fast code, keep it clean. (”No. Very Clean!”)
  • If you want extensible code, keep it clean
  • If you want testable code, keep it clean

The Value of Elegance

Yes, aesthetics matters! But do not fall in love with a design because it seems particularly fine and clever.
Style is not fashion.
Elegance offers guidance in economy. It places human in the picture, encouraging comprehensibility, care and creativity.

Kevlin concluded his speech with an optimistic note: “We are moving in the right direction.” “Refactoring is mainstream!” J

JAOO2007 – Professional Developer (Part I)

Filed under: Agile, JAOO, Software Craftsmanship — Julien @ 9:30 pm

Part I: Robert C. Martin - Clean Code II: Craftsmanship and Ethics.

Do software developers feel comfortable with their profession? Many of us prefer to introduce themselves as architects or designers. Others expect to be Project Managers. Symptoms? Signs of a bad comprehension of our activity?

Bob Martin opened JAOO conference by introducing a track on the craft of software developer (Wednesday track).
We have to define our profession, elaborate an ethic, a corpus of tools and methods. For him, things are getting better, in particular with the advent of Agile practices.

Here are the main points of his speech:

What makes a Professional Developer?

Discipline
There is a lack of Discipline! L… Agile values are welcome!

Green Band (see on the picture above?)
A symbol of personal ethic and professional pride (I write good code with tests). Can’t remove it.
 

Short iterations to keep projects on track
Cycles to deployable solution (not necessary deployed)

Don’t wait for Definition
In particular, don’t wait for definitions from the customer.
Zeno and the paradox of motion: run after specifications of existing software.

Abstract away volatility (GUI / Business Rules)
No need to put business rules in JavaScript… J

Commission > Omission 
It’s better to do than not: experiment rather than wait for something (e.g. between team A and team B).

Decouple from others! Use mocks, stubs, simulators.
Never be blocked, always find some ways to progress.

Avoid Turgid Viscous Architectures, built by architects who try to solve everything. They create more problems than it solves.
Build simple, focus on problems. The architect must write code.

Incremental Improvement
Clean up day by day. Always check in code a little bit better that it was when checked it out.

No grand redesigns
Let time for usual work, fixing bugs…

Progressive Widening
Build by spikes from the GUI to data. Then, widen them.

Progressive Deepening
Go deep into layers progressively. Start with something that works (e.g. direct GUI to Data).

Don’t write bad code :-) You will immediately be slowed down by bad code. Go fast is go well.
Bad code progressively decline.

Write Clean Code:
What is clean code?? 10 lines. 5 minutes to understand. Read it is obvious. Code that do what you expect.

TDD: Nonsense! I’ve got a brain!
No… Test Driven Development is a fundamental activity. It forces to adopt a style to develop code that works minutes after minutes.
Test is what makes code flexible and maintainable. You can change and clean without breaking anything.

QA Should Find Nothing: don’t use QA to find your bugs!

100% code coverage: Not for managers!

Avoid Debugging: Temptation of leap into the debugger (« follow the debugger! »). Think & understand is better.

Manual test Scripts are Immoral: they are just big documents to put to sleep elephants.
Automate as much as possible and have testers to do exploratory testing.

Definition of done. Choose definition of done, only one definition (not “Done” and “Done done”J).

Test through right interface
Otherwise, it leads to things like « never change the GUI » to avoid break GUI tests. Don’t test business rules through the GUI.

Apprenticeship: teach to other developers (unfortunately being a good developer is not taught at school).
Pair Programming is also made for that.

Use Good Tools

September 21, 2007

Mon programme pour JAOO 2007

Filed under: Conferences, JAOO — Julien @ 4:22 pm

J’y serai ! Voici les sessions qui m’attirent à première vue… mais le choix est difficile !

Monday 

 Agility on the Edge  

 Five Things I Wish I Learned In College  

 Real-World Ruby  

 Solution Track: Virtualization for Developers  

 The .Net Road  

 The Programming Experience  

Host 

Jutta Eckstein  

Erik Meijer  

Glenn Vanderburg  

Rene W. Schmidt  

Joe Hummel

Markus Völter  

09:00 - 10:00  

Opening Keynote: Clean Code II: Craftsmanship and Ethics.

Track host: Robert C. Martin

10:00 - 10:30  

Break

10:30 - 10:45  

Introduction: Agility on the Edge

Aino Vonge Corry & Track host: Jutta Eckstein

Location: Conference Hall 2

Introduction: Five Things I Wish I Learned in College

Track host: Erik Meijer

Location: Conference Hall

Introduction: Ruby

Track host: Glenn Vanderburg

Location: SAS Nortvegia

Virtualization at JAOO

Steffen Grarup

Introduction: . Net

Trackhost: Joe Hummel, PhD

Location: SAS Dania

Introduction: The programming experience

Track host: Markus Völter

Location: Conference Hall 3

10:45 - 11:00  

Break

11:00 - 12:00

Refactoring Databases: Evolutionary Database Design

Pramod Sadalage

Location: Conference Hall 2

A Programming Language for the New Web

Shriram Krishnamurthi

Location: Conference Hall

JRuby: The Beauty and Power of Ruby on the JVM

Thomas Enebo & Charles Nutter

Location: SAS Nortvegia

Crash course on Virtualization & Virtual Appliances

Rene W. Schmidt

Writing Domain Specific Languages in Boo

Oren Eini

Location: SAS Dania

Intentional Software - Democratizing Software Creation

Charles Simonyi & Henk Kolk

Location: Conference Hall 3

12:00 - 13:00  

Lunch

13:00 - 14:00  

Organically Agile

Klaus Marquardt

Location: Conference Hall 2

Tales From The Financial Industry

Lennart Augustson

Location: Conference Hall

What makes code beautiful? (And why beauty matters)

Marcel Molina Jr

Location: SAS Nortvegia

Virtualization for Software Test and Development

Steven Kishi

Ajax on .NET: Microsoft Ajax Extensions for ASP.NET

Trackhost: Joe Hummel, PhD

Location: SAS Dania

Erlang - software for a concurrent world

Joe Armstrong

Location: Conference Hall 3

14:00 - 14:30  

Break

14:30 - 15:30  

Experiences with Agility in the Mainframe Environment

Jan Mütter

Location: Conference Hall 2

Property based testing with Quviq QuickCheck

Thomas Arts

Location: Conference Hall

Ruby in the Enterprise - A Case Study

Justin Gehtland

Location: SAS Nortvegia

LiquidVM - Better Resource Control and More Efficient Java in a Virtualized World

Mikael Vidstedt

Testing Data Access code pragmatically

Roy Osherove

Location: SAS Dania

Scala: Bringing the Future to the JVM

Lex Spoon

Location: Conference Hall 3

15:30 - 16:00  

Break

16:00 - 17:00  

Global - Yet Agile - Software Development

Track host: Jutta Eckstein

Location: Conference Hall 2

Executable Grammars

Gilad Bracha

Location: Conference Hall

Ruby and the Art of Domain Specific Languages

Rich Kilmer

Location: SAS Nortvegia

Debugging hard bugs using Record/Replay technology

Gustav Wibling

Information cards and .Net - Cardspace

René Løhde

Location: SAS Dania

Developing Software like a band plays Jazz - From Eclipse to Jazz

Erich Gamma

Location: Conference Hall 3

17:00 - 17:15  

Break

17:15 - 18:15  

Agile Retrospectives: Inspecting and Adapting In Challenging Environments

Diana Larsen

Location: Conference Hall 2

Beautiful Debugging

Andreas Zeller

Location: Conference Hall

Mingle: Building a Rails-Based Product

Neal Ford

Location: SAS Nortvegia

Virtualization: TBA (5)

Speakers: TBA  

An introduction to Spring.NET

Mark Pollack

Location: SAS Dania

Terracotta: Open Source Network-Attached Memory and JVM-level Clustering

Jonas Bonér

Location: Conference Hall 3

18:15 - 18:30  

Break

18:30 - 19:30  

Party Keynote: Charles in Space

Charles Simonyi

19:30 - 20:00  

Exhibitor Reception

20:00 - 23:59  

JAOO Conference Party

 

 

Tuesday 

 Architecture Quality (day 1)

 Enterprise Application Frameworks (day 1)  

 LINQ  

 Modeling  

 Scrum At JAOO2007  

 Solution Track : Tuesday  

 Web 2.0  

Host 

Frank Buschmann  

Eberhard Wolff  

Mads Torgersen  

Rebecca Wirfs-Brock  

Jeff Sutherland  

 

Beat Schwegler  

09:15 - 10:00

Democratizing the Cloud

Track host: Erik Meijer

10:00 - 10:30  

Break

10:30 - 10:45  

Introduction: Architecture Quality (day1)

Track host: Frank Buschmann

Location: Conference Hall

Introduction: Enterprise Application Frameworks (day 1)

Track host: Eberhard Wolff

Location: SAS Nortvegia

Introduction: LINQ

Speakers: TBA
Location: SAS Dania

Introduction: Design and Modeling

Track host: Rebecca Wirfs-Brock

Location: Conference Hall 3

Introduction: Scrum at JAOO

Track host: Jeff Sutherland

Location: Conference Hall 2

Spring SpaceCraft

Shay Banon

Introduction: Web 2.0

Track host: Beat Schwegler

Location: SAS Suecia

10:45 - 11:00  

Break

11:00 - 12:00  

Architecting for Software Product Lines

Jan Bosch

Location: Conference Hall

Painless Persistence with Castle ActiveRecord

Hamilton Verissimo & Oren Eini

Location: SAS Nortvegia

The .NET Language Integrated Query (LINQ) Framework

Luca Bolognese

Location: SAS Dania

Models that work: When Model Engineering Meets Open Source

Jean Bezivin

Location: Conference Hall 3

Planning in Large Companies

Hubert Smits

Location: Conference Hall 2

JBoss - The professional Open Source SOA Platform

Michael Martinsen

Building Rich Internet Applications for the Browser and the Desktop with Flex and AIR

Christophe Coenraets

Location: SAS Suecia

12:00 - 13:00  

Lunch

13:00 - 14:00  

Managing Variability in Product-Lines

Track host: Markus Völter

Location: Conference Hall

Leveling Persistence and State Management Technologies with Spring

Track host: Eberhard Wolff

Location: SAS Nortvegia

C# 3.0 under the hood

Track host: Mads Torgersen

Location: SAS Dania

Strategic Design

Eric Evans

Location: Conference Hall 3

Implementing Type C Scrum in different corporate models

Evan Campbell

Location: Conference Hall 2

Inside JavaBlackBelt

John Rizzo

Building Large Applications with GWT 1.4

Rajeev Dayal

Location: SAS Suecia

14:00 - 14:20  

Break

14:20 - 15:20  

Complexity Management

Klaus Marquardt

Location: Conference Hall

Active Record - Easy Living on the Golden Path

Chad Fowler

Location: SAS Nortvegia

LINQ to XML

Track host: Erik Meijer

Location: SAS Dania

Things your mother didn’t tell you about architecture and GUIs

Trygve Reenskaug

Location: Conference Hall 3

Scrum Architecture

Jim O. Coplien

Location: Conference Hall 2

The Heretic’s View of Java Persistence

Mike Fuller

From HTML to XUL, Web to Desktop

Shane Caraveo

Location: SAS Suecia

15:20 - 15:40  

Break

15:40 - 16:40  

Variability (and) Modeling

Krzysztof Czarnecki

Location: Conference Hall

Grails: Next Generation Spring plus Hibernate Development

Graeme Rocher

Location: SAS Nortvegia

Using LINQ to SQL to Access Relational Data

Luca Bolognese

Location: SAS Dania

The Adaptive Object-Model Architecture: Giving users control over their business model

Joseph Yoder

Location: Conference Hall 3

Scrum@British Telecom

Paul Goddard & Geoff Watts

Location: Conference Hall 2

CruiseControl

Chris Read & Track host: Erik Dörnenburg

JavaFX

Speakers: TBA
Location: SAS Suecia

16:40 - 16:55  

Break

16:55 - 17:55  

The Symphonia Product-Line

Wolfgang Strunk

Location: Conference Hall

JCR in the Real World

Alexandru Popescu

Location: SAS Nortvegia

LINQ for Domain Driven Design (DDD)

Kim Harding Christensen & Jimmy Nilsson

Location: SAS Dania

Muddle-Driven Marketecture or Model-Driven Tarchitecture?

Cris Kobryn

Location: Conference Hall 3

Heartbeat Retrospectives

Boris Gloger

Location: Conference Hall 2

Using the public Danish SOA Infrastructure

Mikkel Hippe Brun

The Overlooked Power of JavaScript

Track host: Glenn Vanderburg

Location: SAS Suecia

17:55 - 18:05  

Break

18:05 - 18:50  

Sun Keynote

Matt Thompson

18:50 - 19:00  

Break

19:00 - 21:00  

JAOO IT-Run

21:00 - 23:00  

Jam Session

 

Wednesday 

 Architecture Quality (day 2)  

 Enterprise Application Frameworks (day 2)  

 Professional Developer  

 Public Sector Open Source  

 Scrum at JAOO: Case Studies

 Scrum: Open Space Discussions  

 Solution Track: Wednesday  

Host 

Frank Buschmann  

Erik Doernenburg  

Bob Martin  

Mogens Kühn Pedersen  

TBA  

Facilitator: Diana Larsen & Jens Østergaard  

 

09:00 - 09:15  

Introduction: Architecture Quality (day2)

Track host: Frank Buschmann

Location: Conference Hall

Introduction: Enterprise Application Frameworks (day 2)

Track host: Erik Dörnenburg

Location: SAS Nortvegia

Introduction: Professional Developer

Track host: Robert C. Martin

Location: Conference Hall 3

Introduction: Public Sector Open Source

Mogens Kühn Pedersen

Location: SAS Dania

Introduction: Case Studies

Speakers: TBA
Location: Conference Hall 2

Introduction: Open Space

Speakers: TBA  

 

09:15 - 09:30  

Break

09:30 - 10:30  

Operational Scalability in the Next-Gen-Web World

Wayne Fenton

Location: Conference Hall

MonoRail: Building Maintainable & Testable Web Applications

Hamilton Verissimo & Oren Eini

Location: SAS Nortvegia

With Economy and Elegance

Kevlin Henney

Location: Conference Hall 3

Developing and Sustaining Local Authority Applications through

Aingaran Pillai

Location: SAS Dania

Scrum@Planon

Erik Jaspers & Maarten Smeets

Location: Conference Hall 2

Open Space (1)

Speakers: TBA  

ServiceMix 4.0, the next generation ESB

Guillaume Nodet

10:30 - 11:00  

Break

11:00 - 12:00  

Fault Tolerance

Robert S. Hanmer

Location: Conference Hall

Choosing the right technology for the web-tier

Alef Arendsen

Location: SAS Nortvegia

The Journeyman’s Tale

Laurent Bossavit

Location: Conference Hall 3

OSS Electronic Health Care Records; Vista in Denmark

Martin Sølvkjær

Location: SAS Dania

Scrum@Telenor

Peter Johansson & Arne Ahlander

Location: Conference Hall 2

Open Space (2)

Speakers: TBA

Infragistics

Speakers: TBA  

12:00 - 13:00  

Lunch

13:00 - 14:00  

Performance Art

Kevlin Henney

Location: Conference Hall

Ruby on Rails - ActionPack

Justin Gehtland

Location: SAS Nortvegia

The Ethics of Error-Prevention

Michael Feathers

Location: Conference Hall 3

An Open Source Strategy for a nation

Bruno F. Souza

Location: SAS Dania

Scrum@Yahoo

Gabrielle Benefield

Location: Conference Hall 2

Open Space (3)

Speakers: TBA  

Architecture for a European SOI for e-procurement

Christian Lanng

14:00 - 14:30  

Break

14:30 - 15:30  

Lessons Learned From Architecture Reviews

Track host: Rebecca Wirfs-Brock

Location: Conference Hall

Case Study: The New Guardian.co.uk

Track host: Erik Dörnenburg & Matthew Wall

Location: SAS Nortvegia

Applying Craftsmanship

Pete McBreen

Location: Conference Hall 3

History of B103 and ODF,OOXML Panel Discussion

Florian Reuter & René Løhde & Rachid El Mousti

Location: SAS Dania

Scrum@Nokia

Bas Vodde

Location: Conference Hall 2

Open Space (4)

Speakers: TBA  

Open UDDI

Speakers: TBA  

15:30 - 16:00  

Break

16:00 - 17:00  

Panel: Does Architecture Quality Matter?

Klaus Marquardt & Kevlin Henney & Track host: Rebecca Wirfs-Brock & Track host: Frank Buschmann & Jan Bosch

Location: Conference Hall

Panel: Enterprise Application Frameworks

Graeme Rocher & Track host: Erik Dörnenburg & Alef Arendsen & Justin Gehtland & Track host: Eberhard Wolff & Oren Eini

Location: SAS Nortvegia

Finding your Inner Doll - Layers of a Professional

Ilja Preuss

Location: Conference Hall 3

Panel: Shared Business Application Systems

Martin Niels Pedersen & Mogens Kühn Pedersen & Martin Sølvkjær

Location: SAS Dania

Scrum@Bang&Olufsen

Jørn A. Hansen & Chris Thomasen

Location: Conference Hall 2

Open Space (5)

Speakers: TBA  

 

17:00 - 17:15  

Break

17:15 - 18:15  

Final Panel

Martin Fowler

Location: Conference Hall 3

 

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