July 2001
Intermediate to advanced
656 pages
15h 51m
English
Written requirements can promote the illusion that the real requirements are understood and well-defined, and can (early on) be used to reliably estimate and plan the project. This illusion is more strong for non-software developers; programmers know from painful experience how unreliable it is. This is part of the motivation for the opening quote by Goethe.
What really matters is building software that passes the acceptance tests defined by the users and stakeholders, and that meets their true goals (which are often not discovered until they are evaluating or working with the software).
Writing a Vision and Supplementary Specification is worthwhile as an exercise in clarifying a first approximation ...
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