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Our investor wants a SDLC. I've never written one before, and I don't have enough time to go and buy a book, or spend much time learning about them. From what I've been told about them, they consist of requirements (what needs to be done), and a list is done. Is this correct?

Update:

I have found this article which really helps to explain things in simple terms and very quickly. Not that I think an SDLC should be done quickly. In my case, I have no other option.

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    You can't afford NOT to invest time in really understanding your SDLC and best practice for an SDLC. You will waste an enormous amount of effort if you don't have a clear understanding of your software development process from requirement to development to QA to go-live to support.
    – Eric J.
    May 2, 2010 at 22:05
  • What are you going to give your investors, a pile of code ? How do they know what kind of quality they are getting ? May 2, 2010 at 22:20
  • 10 years old and this question is still a timeless classic.
    – Adrian K
    Sep 29, 2020 at 1:21

4 Answers 4

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There are lots of ideas about SDLC out there. You can't swing a cat without hitting one.

What have you done to develop software that attracted your investor in the first place? Can't you describe that? Why do you have to go out and "learn one"?

There's a number of choices:

  1. Waterfall: requirements->design->build->test->deploy, all in sequence
  2. Iterative: similar to waterfall, but you break the design into smaller pieces, of 1-2 week duration, that are delivered at the end of the iteration.
  3. Extreme Programming (XP): Kent Beck's approach; no BDUF (Big Design Up Front). Everything is designed, built, and delivered in small pieces.
  4. Scrum: Agile, iterative, but not as dogmatic as XP.
  5. Rational Unified Process: Waterfall from IBM.
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    Very few of which are significant or worth knowing. And not one that can guarantee a quality program.
    – duffymo
    May 2, 2010 at 22:10
  • It seems your investors think their investment is more safe to make when you've got some kind of paperwork that conforms to their expectations. This is remarkably similar to a job interview question. There is no right answer, only the answer your interviewer wants to hear. If their last big pay-off used Waterfall then they will assume you will fail if you don't.
    – Warren P
    Nov 12, 2010 at 16:45
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Not really; that's more project management. That's what you need at the point where you've figured out how you're going to develop software.

For the 'how' of developing Software, the two 'biggies' are Agile and Waterfall; with a weird hybrid in between the two.

But that's only one part of the Software Development Life Cycle: You still have to have a maintenance and deployment plan.

My question for you: If someone's giving you money, and they want a plan, isn't it in your best interest to read a book about the SDLC and give them a plan?

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  • Thanks for the answer. I don't understand why they need a plan. The software's already been made. We only need to implement two more features. And we're supposed to be giving this SDLC to whatever software dev. company we choose to let finish those two features. I've read about the Waterfall methodology on Wikipedia.org, and now I'm confused. Do you know of any sites that explain the process of writing one in simple terms? My first thought was to go anmd buy a book. But I'd have to travel into the city (4hours away). But they want the SDLC by tomorrow.
    – anon271334
    May 2, 2010 at 22:06
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    @j-t-s: If your company is asking them for money, it's a pretty safe bet that the last line of code hasn't been written... you're probably not even close. These two features, then patches and bug fixes, then version 2 to meet new customer requirements, ... They want to know that you'll be able make good use of their money to evolve the code over time, until it's at a point where they have made their investment back with a good profit.
    – Eric J.
    May 2, 2010 at 22:17
  • IMHO you woke up too late to do a good job. The reason is that the investor wants same work (quality) from the other company. You should basically describe how you did the development of the system. May 2, 2010 at 22:17
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If your investor wants you to describe the SDLC, he wants that you describe how looks the life of a software project which is done by you from its plan, birth, through growth to maturity and death. That is the reason why it has "life" in its name. The result of SDLC should be "software" hence the first word. The "development" part comes from the fact that you are responsible for planning, specifying, designing and implementation of the software, you should create (develop) the software. And finally, "cycle" means that, when the investor looks at you SDLC and thinks it is good (it produces quality and business value), he can ask you to use the same process once again in another project.

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A complete SDLC meaning you need to perform Requirement gathering and Analysis-> Design (Design document creation) -> Coding and Unit testing -> Testing (System and Integrated testing) -> Deployment and Support -> Maintenance

I found this Blogg really helpful.

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    If that is your blog (and I suspect it is) then you should indicate that here, otherwise it just looks like you're trying to increase your blog hits in a dishonest manner.
    – Nanhydrin
    Nov 13, 2015 at 12:26