One number for the post today: 1001.
This is the number of unique visitors on my blog Qualilogy in 3 months.
Maybe you remember that, at December 31, or 40 days after it has been launched, 300 visitors had made 456 visits and saw 1,160 pages.
I was invited last week to attend a marketing event where different customers did talk about their experience in the world of Cloud and virtualization.
It was really interesting: I learned a lot, but especially, I discovered the vision of the production teams about… application quality.
A message to the project teams: good times are running out. Continue reading
We saw in the previous post ‘Use cases – Working seamlessly together‘ what use cases are most often applied with a code analysis tool, and provide the greatest benefits:
We have seen in the previous two posts that some quite common use cases require just a limited number – 10 to 20 – of metrics. These use cases are:
A comment in the first post asked: “What are these 10 or 20 most important metrics?”
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In the first post of this series ‘How to choose a code analysis tool?’, we mentioned four criteria frequently highlighted even though their importance varies depending on what you want to do.
I am always surprised when an article claims to compare code analysis tools or proposes criteria to choose such a tool. There is no definitive answer to this question, other than ‘it depends’.
If you want to buy a car, you will of course make your choice based on some criteria depending on the usage you plan for your vehicle. A coupe or convertible sports car are certainly attractive objects but impractical when it comes to transport your large family, do your shopping at Carrefour or go the beach with your surfing board.
Same when it comes to the selection of a tool to analyze the quality of your applications.
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New Year’s greetings is always an opportunity to contact people and I did call someone I had not been talking for a while. As we are in the same consulting business, we soon were sharing views about how things were doing, and I asked him about a company where we have been working together.
He told me that their projects had been going so chaotic that they decided to outsource their applications. They recognized that they failed in maintaining the source code: too complex, too much difficulties to implement evolutions without generating a lot of defects, schedules not met, IT image and credibility going down.
My first thought was that they had made a great step ahead: they know that they do not know. Continue reading
I got a nice Christmas gift.
I love it.
This is a Sonar plugin that has been developed by eXcentia, a spanish company located in the beautiful city of Valencia, that you already know if you are interested in sport events like America’s cup, Formula 1 or Moto GP racings and, last but not least, is also famously renowned for its … paella.
This Sonar extension, based on WebGL, is part of eXcentia’s framework QAlitaX. It provides a 3D visual representation of an application, using Sonar metrics to model it as a city. You can find it here on eXcentia web site. Continue reading
There are more and more solutions of analysis of code which allow to measure the quality of your applications. Most are sold by software vendors, and we had the opportunity to verify that these solutions are expensive to buy, to implement and to use (Disposable software). In response, the last decade has seen the rise of the Open Source alternative to proprietary software.
I often hear about Open Source solutions that:
Continue reading