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3.0 out of 5 stars
Very patchy, you won't read it cover-to-cover, Sep 1 2003
This review is from: Extreme Programming Examined (Paperback)
I was disappointed with this book the moment I saw it. Most of the books in the "XP Series" are slim and concise. This one runs to 570 pages - it's not quite a Wrox tome, but it's still too big for my liking. It's not like the rest of the series in style, either; it's just a collection of thirty-three unrelated articles all by different authors. On one hand, there is probably at least one article in here for anyone interested in XP. On the other, there are probably several that won't interest you at all. Some articles describe experiences, some describe other methodologies similar to XP, and some focus on specific practices within XP. And some are very academic - "stochastic math" anyone ? The articles which comprise this book are so varied that it's hard to give an overall recommendation. You really need to study the contents page and dip into a few articles to see if there is anything to tempt you to buy this. As a shared resource for a large team or library it's a good purchase, but for an individual it might be a doorstop after reading the ten pages you actually find interesting. If you are looking at XP, but not heavily using or researching it, then I suggest you go for some of the other XP series books instead.
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4.0 out of 5 stars
A welcome look beyond evangelism, Aug 5 2001
This review is from: Extreme Programming Examined (Paperback)
This is the book to read after you understand enough XP to question its radicalism. Does it really make sense to abandon UML-style modeling? No, suggests OO guru Martin Fowler in an essay reconciling XP with heavyweight design. Is XP's Planning Game the ideal way to bring customers and IT management together? Maybe, but at Ford Motor Company it was "a total disaster." Nearly all of the essays in this uneven but illuminating text advance XP's cause, not through blunt evangelism, but by questioning the new process and building bridges to it from traditional practice. I happen to believe in class diagrams and other OO model artifacts. In contrast to other books in the Addison-Wesley XP Series, Examined shows that there plenty of smart, like-minded professionals out there striving to gain XP's benefits without jettisoning their tried-and-true belief systems. The sections "Methodology and Practice," "Flexible Techniques and UML" and "Practical Experiences," consisting of five essays each, were especially useful in this regard. I found other sections, notably the one on "Tools for XP Development," less distinctive. While XP's 'extremity' may be a selling point in some circles, in others it is sure to provoke the same kind of immune response as 'hacker'. If you feel itchy at the prospect of spike solutions and pair programming, "Extreme Programming Examined," with its collection of balanced voices seeking rapproachement, is the book for you.
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5.0 out of 5 stars
Many outstanding contributions, July 6 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: Extreme Programming Examined (Paperback)
Unlike the other books of Addison Wesley's The XP Series, this is a collection of 33 papers, presented at an XP conference held in 2000. As one might expect, not all 33 papers are of the highest quality, and some of them are of interest only to a few specialists. However, the book includes many outstanding contributions covering more advanced aspects of XP than the other books of the XP series. In my opinion, these are the chapters written by M. Fowler, P. Merel, D. Riehle, M. Collins-Cope, J. Eckstein, J. Kerievsky, A. Cockburn, T. Mackinnon, R. Johnson, T. Schummer, D. Wells, K. Boutin and A van Deursen (I quote only the first author). Many of them will become XP classics. Also the Parts on XP and UML, Testing, and Practical Experiences are full of useful ideas and hints. Overall, I found the book very helpful: it gave me all what expected, and more.
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