Book Image

Hands-On Software Engineering with Python

By : Brian Allbee, Nimesh Verma
Book Image

Hands-On Software Engineering with Python

By: Brian Allbee, Nimesh Verma

Overview of this book

Software Engineering is about more than just writing code—it includes a host of soft skills that apply to almost any development effort, no matter what the language, development methodology, or scope of the project. Being a senior developer all but requires awareness of how those skills, along with their expected technical counterparts, mesh together through a project's life cycle. This book walks you through that discovery by going over the entire life cycle of a multi-tier system and its related software projects. You'll see what happens before any development takes place, and what impact the decisions and designs made at each step have on the development process. The development of the entire project, over the course of several iterations based on real-world Agile iterations, will be executed, sometimes starting from nothing, in one of the fastest growing languages in the world—Python. Application of practices in Python will be laid out, along with a number of Python-specific capabilities that are often overlooked. Finally, the book will implement a high-performance computing solution, from first principles through complete foundation.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
Programming versus Software Engineering

Iteration goals

The deliverables of this iteration are mostly focused, then, on the following:

  • A master repository, stored in a Git server or service (local server, GitHub, or Bitbucket, for example) that contains the complete, empty project structure for the system and its component projects
  • A component project for each deployable class library or application in the system
  • A unit test suite that can be executed and whose execution passes for each component project in the system
  • A build process for each component project – also executable  that results in a deployable package, even if that package starts as something that's essentially useless