Many decisions are required throughout the software development
process. These decisions, and to some extent the decision-making
process itself, can best be documented as the rationale for the
system, which will reveal not only what was done during development
but the reasons behind the choices made and alternatives considered
and rejected. This information becomes increasingly critical as
software development becomes more distributed and encompasses the
corporate knowledge both used and refined during the development
process. The capture of rationale helps to ensure that decisions
are well thought out and justified and the use of rationale can
help avoid the mistakes of the past during both the development of
the current system and when software products (architecture and
design, as well as code) are reused in future systems.
Burge, Carroll, McCall, and Mistrik describe in detail the
capture and use of design rationale in software engineering to
improve the quality of software. Their book is the first
comprehensive and unified treatment of rationale usage in software
engineering. It provides a consistent conceptual framework and a
unified terminology for comparing, contrasting and combining the
myriad approaches to rationale in software engineering. It is both
an excellent introductory text for those new to the field and a
uniquely valuable reference for experienced rationale researchers.
The book covers the use of rationale for decision making throughout
the software lifecycle, starting from the first decisions in a
project and continuing through requirements definition, design,
implementation, testing, maintenance, redesign and reuse."
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