Dictionary Definition
extensible adj : capable of being protruded or
stretched or opened out; "an extensile tongue"; "an extensible
measuring rule" [syn: extensile] [ant: nonextensile]
User Contributed Dictionary
Extensive Definition
In software
engineering, extensibility (sometimes confused with forward
compatibility) is a system
design principle where the implementation takes into
consideration future growth. It is a systemic measure of the
ability to extend a system and the level of effort
required to implement the extension. Extensions can be through the
addition of new functionality or through modification of existing
functionality. The central theme is to provide for change while
minimizing impact to existing system functions.
In systems
architecture, extensibility means the system is designed to
include hooks and mechanisms for expanding/enhancing the system
with new capabilities without having to make major changes to the
system infrastructure. A good architecture provides the design
principles to ensure this—a roadmap for that portion of the road
yet to be built. Note that this usually means that capabilities and
mechanisms must be built into the final delivery which will not be
used in that delivery and, indeed, may never be used. These excess
capabilities are not frills, but are necessary for maintainability and for
avoiding early obsolescence.
Extensibility can also mean that a software
system's behavior is modifiable at runtime, without recompiling or
changing the original source code. For example, a software system
may have a public
Application Programming Interface that allows its behavior to
be extended or modified by people who don't have access to the
original source code.
Although usually applied to engineered systems involving software, it can be applied to
any type of engineering. Houses can be built with future extensions
in mind. The Prince
Edward Viaduct located in Toronto, Ontario, Canada was built to
accommodate a future subway line.
Though the application to software is relatively
new, the word has been a rare but valid part of English for a long
time. The Oxford
English Dictionary cites examples going back to the 17th
century.
extensible in French: Extensibilité
extensible in Japanese: 拡張性