FDD
Feature Driven Development (FDD) is an agile methodology focused on designing and building features based on client-valued functionality.
Feature Driven Development (FDD) is an agile methodology focused on designing and building features based on client-valued functionality.
A lightweight, flexible approach to software development that emphasizes team communication and continuous improvement.
A technique used in software development to enable or disable features in a production environment without deploying new code, allowing for controlled feature rollouts.
A product development methodology that emphasizes shaping work before starting it, fixing time and team size but leaving scope flexible to ensure high-quality outcomes.
Minimum Marketable Feature (MMF) is the smallest set of functionality that delivers significant value to users and can be marketed effectively.
A prioritized list of features, enhancements, and fixes that are intended to be addressed in future product development cycles.
A declaration of the values and principles essential for agile software development.
An environment that replicates the production environment, used for final testing before deployment.
An environment closer to production where final testing and validation occur.