Job posting in StackOverflow (although I have not seen it in recently postings) have the Joel Test grade attached to them. It is 12-software development practices a company should be using. The number of practices used give candidates an idea of the quality of a company's development environment. See: http://www.joelonsoftware.com/articles/fog0000000043.html
It was written 15 years ago and is woefully dated. I suggest a different standard and its listed below:
- Have Automated test suite: All levels of code should have test suite- basically code should tell you if it has a problem. Just like a mechanic can use a computer for diagnosis. The test suite should include- Unit test and Integration/BDD Test. UI Test, CSS test may be used depending on application-type. The sense if to reduce human-testing error and reduce the cost of human testing.
- Continuous Integration: Code should be built on check-in. There should not be manual step to move code between environments- It should be automated.
- Continuous Deployment: Code should be frequently given to the consumers in an automated fashion. You should not have to wait months after a bug or feature is complete before giving it to consumers
- Source Control with versioning, branching and tagging. You should be able to rollback changes, tag a version and do many other things that alleviate worries of the consequences of having to undo changes or being able to access code. Two people should be able to work on the same codebase without much worry
- Have a living spec vetted by everyone involved in its implementation (Developers [intern - VPs], UX Designers, etc): Everyone should be an expert and understand the business and problem addressed. The specs should be updated as business needs changes- it should be a living document.
- Continuous stream of user feedback rather than a giant pile at completion of a project: Feedback of users should be welcomed and addressed quickly. The software development should be be so lagged that feedback is considered a burden
- Have Coding Standards: It is great that developers think differently. Within reason, code should be written in a way that makes it easy for anyone to learn API's and read others' code. There some be some sense of uniformity
- Have Code Reviews: Everyone should have their code critiqued by at least one peer prior to release. Bad-code should be corrected prior to release.
- Test and Prod environments should mirror each other: This help alleviate some issues that happen in Prod but not in test environment.
- Should be easy to get a manage running with the code base and dependencies; like with a container: It should not take many person-hours to get a new developer up-and-about. There should be a configuration that install all dependencies
- Developers and business owners should meet regularly to talk about progress and challenges: Issues should be addressed sooner rather than later. Every should have an idea of the progress of the project and the sense of where they are in the timeline.
- Tracking system should be used to keep track of progress rather than word-of-mouth or other means: You should be able to know what someone has done, is doing and will do without having to ask. Bug, features, and progress should be logged and visible for all relevant persons to examine.
Does anyone see merit to this?