> Do you often look at old story cards? Or is this more a concern you have
> with the theory? Personally, I rarely look at more than the last couple of
> weeks of cards unless I'm trying to answer some historical question.
I'm only theoretic here... I wish for, and long for going real some day, in
some project.
I have got a good hint how others handle their cards after implementing the
story.
>> Agreed, and the design space is spanned with user stories in their
>> simplest form.
> Hmmm... Depending on the definition of design, I'd probably disagree with
> that.
I did not mean "design space", sorry...
I meant some other "system vision space" or something like that.
> In my experience, story cards often modify previous features and
> interfaces, so for many projects I don't think the current design is well
> summarized with story cards.
But the Conversation in Ron Jeferries "Card, Conversation, Confirmation" is.
I wonder how much of it is kept in cards?
Or whereelse you keep the design, that is inspired from that Conversation?
Somewhere in the details, you may go beyond the technical knowledge of the
customer.
How do you keep the conversation at the customer level?
>> I like also to think in terms of expanding the User Stories into Use
>> Cases, to capture the interesting design issues.
> Once you've done that, what would you do with those documents?
Keep it away from the customer, and the Conversation on the story card,
reflects the technical design issues on a level that the customer still can
easily understand. (Know nowe, that I am still only in theory. This might not
work out well in real-life?)
>> For example: User Interfaces and maybe also non-functional requirements,
>> that is interfacing to some function, can be expressed in the
>> "user-story-exapnded-to-a-use-case."
> Hmmm... When do you find documenting those things useful?
When going beyond the technical knowledge of the customer?
> For user interfaces...
> For non-functional requirements...
For these issues, see my answer to John Roth.
I understand that differently now.
>Thanks,
> William
Well, thank you, William
/Mattias
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