Software walkthrough

In software engineering, a walkthrough or walk-through is a form of software peer review "in which a designer or programmer leads members of the development team and other interested parties through a software product, and the participants ask questions and make comments about possible errors, violation of development standards, and other problems".[1] The reviews are also performed by assessors, specialists, etc. and are suggested or mandatory as required by norms and standards.[2]

"Software product" normally refers to some kind of technical document. As indicated by the IEEE definition, this might be a software design document or program source code, but use cases, business process definitions, test case specifications, and a variety of other technical documentation may also be walked through.

A walkthrough differs from software technical reviews in its openness of structure and its objective of familiarization. It differs from software inspection in its ability to suggest direct alterations to the product reviewed. It lacks of direct focus on training and process improvement, process and product measurement.

  1. ^ IEEE Standard for Software Reviews and Audits. 2008-08-15. pp. 1–53. doi:10.1109/IEEESTD.2008.4601584. ISBN 978-0-7381-5768-9.
  2. ^ Pries, Kim H.; Quigley, Jon M. (2009). Project Management of Complex and Embedded Systems. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press (Auerbach Publications). ISBN 978-0-429-11624-7. OCLC 297220015.