Agentsway -- Software Development Methodology for AI Agents-based Teams
Eranga Bandara, Ross Gore, Xueping Liang, Sachini Rajapakse, Isurunima Kularathne, Pramoda Karunarathna, Peter Foytik, Sachin Shetty, Ravi Mukkamala, Abdul Rahman, Amin Hass, Ng Wee Keong, Kasun De Zoysa, Aruna Withanage, Nilaan Loganathan

TL;DR
Agentsway is a pioneering software development methodology tailored for AI agent-based teams, emphasizing structured lifecycle, privacy, explainability, and continuous learning to enhance AI-driven software engineering.
Contribution
It introduces the first dedicated framework for AI agent-centric software development, integrating roles, privacy, and adaptive learning for autonomous AI teams.
Findings
Defines a structured lifecycle for AI agents in software development.
Incorporates privacy-preserving collaboration among AI agents.
Enhances reasoning and explainability through integrated LLMs.
Abstract
The emergence of Agentic AI is fundamentally transforming how software is designed, developed, and maintained. Traditional software development methodologies such as Agile, Kanban, ShapeUp, etc, were originally designed for human-centric teams and are increasingly inadequate in environments where autonomous AI agents contribute to planning, coding, testing, and continuous learning. To address this methodological gap, we present "Agentsway" a novel software development framework designed for ecosystems where AI agents operate as first-class collaborators. Agentsway introduces a structured lifecycle centered on human orchestration, and privacy-preserving collaboration among specialized AI agents. The framework defines distinct roles for planning, prompting, coding, testing, and fine-tuning agents, each contributing to iterative improvement and adaptive learning throughout the development…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
