Decline and Fall of the American Programmer

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Title Decline and Fall of the American Programmer
Author Edward Yourdon
Cover artist Bruce Kenselaar
Country United States of America
Publisher Prentice Hall
Released 1992
Media type Print (Hardback)
Pages 352 (first edition)
ISBN ISBN 0-13-203670-3
Followed by Rise and Resurrection of the American Programmer

Decline and Fall of the American Programmer is a book written by Edward Yourdon in 1992. It was addressed to American programmers and software organizations of the 1990s, warning that they were about to be driven out of business by programmers in other countries who could produce software more cheaply and with higher quality. Yourdon claimed that American software organizations could only retain their edge by using technologies such as ones he described in the book. (These are listed in the chapter outline below.) Yourdon gave examples of how non-American — specifically Indian and Japanese — companies were making use of these technologies to produce high-quality software.

In the follow-up book Rise and Resurrection of the American Programmer, published in 1996, Yourdon reversed some of his original predictions based upon changes in the state of the software industry.

Contents

[edit] Chapter outline

  • 1. Introduction
  • 2. The Lure of the Silver Bullet
  • 3. Peopleware
  • 4. Software Processes
  • 5. Software Methodologies
  • 6. CASE
  • 7. Software Metrics
  • 8. Software Quality Assurance
  • 9. Software Reusability
  • 10. Software Re-Engineering
  • 11. Future Trends
  • A. Software Technology in India
  • B. The Programmer's Bookshelf

[edit] Release details

[edit] See also

[edit] External link


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