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CRIWG
2004

Empirical Evaluation of Collaborative Support for Distributed Pair Programming

14 years 25 days ago
Empirical Evaluation of Collaborative Support for Distributed Pair Programming
Pair programming is an Extreme Programming (XP) practice where two programmers work on a single computer to produce an artifact. Empirical evaluations have provided evidence that this technique results in higher quality code in half the time it would take an individual programmer. Distributed pair programming could facilitate opportunistic pair programming sessions with colleagues working in remote sites. In this paper we present the preliminary results of the empirical evaluation of the COPPER collaborative editor, developed explicitly to support pair programming. The evaluation was performed on three different conditions: pairs working collocated on a single computer; distributed pairs working in application sharing mode; and distributed pairs using collaboration aware facilities. In all three cases the subjects used the COPPER collaborative editor. The results support our hypothesis that distributed pairs could find the same amount of errors as their collocated counterparts. However...
Jesús Favela, Hiroshi Natsu, Cynthia B. P&e
Added 30 Oct 2010
Updated 30 Oct 2010
Type Conference
Year 2004
Where CRIWG
Authors Jesús Favela, Hiroshi Natsu, Cynthia B. Pérez, Omar Robles, Alberto L. Morán, Raul Romero, Ana María Martínez Enríquez, Dominique Decouchant
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