Peter Miller (software engineer)
Peter Miller was an Australian software developer who wrote and created and . He also proposed a set of "laws" for modern software engineering and architecture in the early 1990s:
Miller's laws are:
- The number of interactions within a development team is O without controlled access to the baseline. If the development team does have controlled access to the baseline, interactions can be reduced to near O, where n is the number of developers and/or files in the source tree, whichever is larger.
- The baseline MUST always be in working order.
- The software build/construction process can be reduced to a directed, acyclical graph.
- It is necessary to build a rigid framework of selected components.
- The framework should not do any real work, and should instead delegate everything to external components. The external components should be as interchangeable as possible.
- The framework should use the Strategy pattern for most complex tasks.