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Brian Marick

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Brian Marick at ALE2011 in Berlin

Brian Marick, a graduate of the University of Illinois, was a software testing specialist in the 1990s, an Agile software development specialist in the 2000s, and concentrates on programming in Ruby and Clojure in the 2010s. Marick was an early proponent of the Context-Driven school of testing, and has authored three books.

Marick is an author of the Agile Manifesto that launched the Agile software development movement. He served on the committee that instituted the Gordon Pask Award, along with Rachel Davies and Dave Thomas.[1][2] His work has since drifted away from focusing on agile processes.[3][4]

Marick has been cited for many of his contributions, including example-driven development,[5] open-source tools he created,[6] subsystem testing,[7] test automation,[8] legacy system development,[9] and learning how to program[10] .[11]

Bibliography[edit]

  • Marick, Brian (1995). The Craft of Software Testing: Subsystem Testing Including Object-Based and Object-Oriented Testing. Prentice Hall. ISBN 0131774115. Search this book on
  • Marick, Brian (2007). Everyday Scripting with Ruby: For Teams, Testers, and You. Pragmatic Bookshelf. ISBN 0-9776166-1-4. Search this book on
  • Marick, Brian (2008). "A Manglish Way of Working: Agile Software Development". In Andrew Pickering and Keith Guzik. The Mangle in Practice: Science, Society, and Becoming. Duke University Press. ISBN 0822343738. Search this book on
  • Marick, Brian (2009). Programming Cocoa with Ruby. Pragmatic Bookshelf. ISBN 978-1-93435-619-7. Search this book on
  • Marick, Brian (2013). Functional Programming for the Object-Oriented Programmer. Leanpub. Search this book on

References[edit]

  1. Davies, Rachel (4 August 2010). "The Gordon Pask Award". Retrieved 26 November 2016.
  2. Sanders, Aaron (31 March 2009). "Interview with Brian Marick – Intent of the Gordon Pask Award". Retrieved 26 November 2016.
  3. "Ten Years Of Agile: An Interview with Brian Marick". InformIT. 3 August 2011. Retrieved 26 November 2016.
  4. Hamilton, Coman (27 May 2015). "The Agile Manifesto – what it means to us today". JAXenter. Retrieved 26 November 2016.
  5. Gregory, Janet; Crispin, Lisa (2014). More Agile Testing. Addison-Wesley Professional. pp. 3, 145. ISBN 0133749568. Search this book on
  6. Spuler, David (1996). C++ and C Tools, Utilities, Libraries, and Resources. Prentice Hall PTR. pp. 218, 219, 374. ISBN 0132266970. Search this book on
  7. Sterling, Chris (2010). Managing Software Debt. Addison-Wesley Professional. p. 94. ISBN 9780321700551. Search this book on
  8. Hamlet, Dick; Maybee, Joe (2001). The Engineering of Software. Addison-Wesley. p. 411. ISBN 0201701030. Search this book on
  9. Poppendieck, Mary; Poppendieck, Tom (2006). Implementing Lean Software Development. Addison-Wesley Professional. p. 166. ISBN 9780133812848. Search this book on
  10. Gregory, Janet; Crispin, Lisa (2014). More Agile Testing. Addison-Wesley Professional. p. 57. ISBN 0133749568. Search this book on
  11. Goucher, Adam; Riley, Tim (2009). Beautiful Testing. O'Reilly Media, Inc. p. 177. ISBN 9781449388683. Search this book on

External links[edit]



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