tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-979335109569268083.post4850238530048382900..comments2023-08-22T07:04:35.956-07:00Comments on Getting the most from Information Technology: Does software craftsmanship make project success harder to attain?Scott Norberghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08003954227206105408noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-979335109569268083.post-52779152982113787292015-05-19T05:15:30.040-07:002015-05-19T05:15:30.040-07:00Thanks for the feedback. You've made me rethin...Thanks for the feedback. You've made me rethink something in my article. My issue isn't with the idea of software craftsmanship itself. My issue is that there are a lot of programmers who don't understand that some tools/approaches are only appropriate for some situations. Unit testing is great, but 100% code coverage is overkill. (I've written about that elsewhere. Let me know ifScott Norberghttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08003954227206105408noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-979335109569268083.post-34540653341611604312015-05-19T01:49:16.116-07:002015-05-19T01:49:16.116-07:00Interesting post. I liked the story about instrume...Interesting post. I liked the story about instrument repairs and the warning is contains.<br /><br />I am one of those "software craftmanship advocates", and I'm certainly agreeing with you that one should take a holistic view and not mindlessly chase some abstract concept of perfection. <br />What I disagree with is that this is what software craftsmanship is about. On the contraryJeroen De Dauwhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18069755598348624399noreply@blogger.com