vote up 11 vote down star
10

How can I make developers follow coding standards?

In our company:

  1. I've given documents and they don't have the patience to read it and follow it.
  2. I've tried telling them again and again "please do it this way" they nod their heads, but still do it the wrong way
  3. We're doing a project for the third time and still they don't seem to follow it properly.

I'm now so tired of this. What is the best way to set standards for coding and make sure they follow them?

Edit:

There are just about 10 developers in my team. They're over pressurized and do not take the time to put comments and do the code neatly since there's more pressure to complete the product from our management. What would be the solution for this?

flag
6  
You seem to be crying out loud for code reviews. – Daniel Daranas Apr 28 at 13:10
17  
Are you these guys manager, or are you a peer trying to dictate something you have no power to dictate? – Paul Tomblin Apr 28 at 13:14
5  
I'm pretty sure private companies don't have to follow the Geneva Convention, so torture's always an option. – Pesto Apr 28 at 13:14
4  
Perhaps if you're doing a project for the third time, it's YOU that's doing things wrong. – TheSoftwareJedi Apr 28 at 13:15
3  
Over pressurized developers need decompression lest they get the bends. – TheSoftwareJedi Apr 28 at 13:31
show 9 more comments

32 Answers

prev 1 2
vote up 6 vote down

It sounds like you aren't respected enough.

Do code reviews, and discuss the coding standards with the team. Maybe they don't adhere because they don't agree. Be flexible.

Perhaps if you're doing a project for the third time, it's YOU that's doing things wrong.

link|flag
vote up 10 vote down

You have the standards. You have a process for them to follow. If they do not follow, terminate them and find qualified individuals who can follow standards.

More specifically,

  1. At the beginning of the project, review the standards with the team. Communicate that they must be followed.
  2. At the end of the project, review to ensure they were followed. If they were not, work with the individuals responsible for not following. Ask questions regarding why etc.
  3. Give him/her a second chance.
  4. If repeated, terminate the individual.
link|flag
3  
Firing all your developers is probably not the way to go. Maybe fire the worst offender and make an example of him, but education is a better solution to this problem. – Winston Smith Apr 28 at 13:08
1  
"Firing all your developers is probably not the way to go. Maybe fire the worst offender..." Or maybe fire yourself, since you weren't able to manage them :) – Daniel Daranas Apr 28 at 13:11
6  
Ask them WHY they won't follow the standards. They probably disagree with them if they're so against them. Revise them if needed. Sure, terminate them when all else fails, but make sure you understand WHY first. Being too authoritative doesn't help! – TheSoftwareJedi Apr 28 at 13:13
show 4 more comments
prev 1 2

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.