Polymer: Development Workflows as Software
Paper in proceeding, 2025

Software development builds digital tools to automate processes, yet its initial phases, up to deployment, remain largely manual. There are two reasons: Development tasks are often under-specified and transitions between tasks usually require a translator. These reasons are mutually reinforcing: it makes little sense to specify tasks when you cannot connect them and writing a translator requires a specification. LLMs change this cost equation: they can handle under-specified systems and they excel at translation. Thus, they can act as skeleton keys that unlock the automation of tasks and transitions that were previously too expensive to automatically interlink. We introduce a recipe for writing development workflows as software (polymer) to further automate the initial phases of development. We show how adopting polymer at Volvo, a large automotive manufacturer, to automate testing saved 2-3 FTEs at the cost of two months to develop and deploy. We close with open challenges when polymerizing development workflows.

Large Language Models

Software development automation

Author

Dhasarathy Parthasarathy

Volvo Group

Yinan Yu

Chalmers, Computer Science and Engineering (Chalmers), Functional Programming

University of Gothenburg

Earl T. Barr

University College London (UCL)

Proceedings of the ACM SIGSOFT Symposium on the Foundations of Software Engineering

15397521 (ISSN)

535-539
9798400712760 (ISBN)

33rd ACM International Conference on the Foundations of Software Engineering, FSE Companion 2025
Trondheim, Norway,

Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)

Software Engineering

DOI

10.1145/3696630.3728494

More information

Latest update

9/3/2025 1