Bookshelf

2005 IEEE Software  
0 7 4 0 -7 4 5 9 / 0 5 / $ 2 0 . 0 0 © 2 0 0 5 I E E E N o v e m b e r / D e c e m b e r 2 0 0 5 I E E E S O F T W A R E 1 0 3 bookshelf E d i t o r : W a r r e n K e u f f e l ■ w k e u f f e l @ c o m p u t e r. o r g I n Extreme Programming, customers write user stories describing the features they want, while developers estimate the time required to develop those features. User stories serve the same purpose as traditional requirements specifications, but their style and level of detail are
more » ... different. Understanding those differences is a major challenge in working with user stories. User Stories Applied: For Agile Software Development explores user stories extensively, discussing common misunderstandings and integration with other XP aspects.
doi:10.1109/ms.2005.148 fatcat:zucppwfmebbl7e7gmso4kv554y