Which level of iteration control includes the use of libraries with check-in and check-out processes? Group of answer choices iteration managment version control no iteration control iteration control
Added by Sarah N.
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Tom and Peter work on the same project. Tom does his work and updates the local copy back to the configuration management server. This process is called: a. Check-in b. Baseline c. Management d. Check-out
Haricharan G.
Which of the following is generally NOT considered as an advantage of using the "Buy Option" to acquiring business software packages? The company will have little or no control over software improvements and new versions. The company can save time by buying rather than building. The company can know what it is getting before it invests in the product. The company can try out the software before purchasing it. With respect to managing risk, following what phase in both the waterfall and agile development processes does the customer determine the application's "value"? Following the release phase of application development Following the cost-benefit assessment phase of application development Following the build phase of application development Following the define phase of application development Which of the following statements would NOT be a function commonly performed as part of the on-going maintenance support activity when using the SLDC (Software Development Life Cycle) development methodology? Make-vs-buy analysis Updating Feature enhancements Debugging
Rachel G.
This two-week project represents a culmination of the concepts and tools that we have been working with throughout the semester. Your task is to implement, document, and demonstrate a workflow/pipeline that includes at minimum the following practices: Code development (Eclipse) Distributed version control (GitHub) Unit testing (JUnit) Build automation (Maven) Continuous integration/continuous delivery (Jenkins) Container/virtual machine export (Docker) Recommended tools are noted in parentheses alongside each concept. You are free to use other tools with similar functionality in your workflow if they work better for you. The deliverable for this project is a recorded demonstration (minimum requirements: (1) screenshare or slideshow, (2) audio) of your integrated software development pipeline which utilizes the concepts and tools noted here. Your demonstration should walk us through the steps of your workflow on your workstation, from local code development to distributed version control to unit testing to build automation to CI/CD to build export or some approximation thereof. The order of operations here is fluid, so don't worry about demonstrating these concepts in precisely this order if some other order makes more sense to you. As long as all of the pieces are there, the project requirements will be met. There is no length requirement; a thorough demonstration might take around ten minutes. Your presentation might be a bit longer or shorter, but it should demonstrate the full process. The purpose of this project is to focus on your workflow so in this case, utilizing code from a previous assignment or other class is perfectly fine - we don't need to generate a new/original program.
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