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Maintainability
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== Usage in different fields == === Engineering === In [[engineering]], maintainability is the ease with which a product can be maintained to: * correct defects or their cause, * [[Repairability|Repair]] or replace faulty or worn-out components without having to replace still working parts, * prevent unexpected working conditions, * maximize a product's useful life, * maximize efficiency, reliability, and safety, * meet new [[requirements]], * make future maintenance easier, or * cope with a changing environment. In some cases, maintainability involves a system of [[continuous improvement]] - learning from the past to improve the ability to maintain systems, or improve the reliability of systems based on maintenance experience. === Telecommunication === In [[telecommunications]] and several other engineering fields, the term maintainability has the following meanings: * A characteristic of design and installation, expressed as the probability that an item will be retained in or restored to a specified condition within a given period of [[time]], when the [[repair and maintenance|maintenance]] is performed by prescribed procedures and resources. * The ease with which maintenance of a [[functional unit]] can be performed by prescribed requirements. === Software === In [[software engineering]], these activities are known as [[software maintenance]] (cf. [[ISO/IEC 9126]]). Closely related concepts in the software engineering domain are evolvability, modifiability, [[technical debt]], and [[code smell]]s. The maintainability index is calculated with certain formulae from [[Lines of code|lines-of-code measures]], [[McCabe Measure|McCabe measures]] and [[Halstead complexity measures]]. The measurement and tracking of maintainability are intended to help reduce or reverse a system's tendency toward "code entropy" or degraded integrity, and to indicate when it becomes cheaper and/or less risky to rewrite the code than it is to change it. {{FS1037C MS188}}
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