Surely there must be some sort of canonical form to implementation,
otherwise we are not software makers and just duct taping hodge podge
together.
So there is a canonical form to bridge implementation. That explains why all
bridges look the same. No?
I studied both Computer Science and
Silky,
I have to disagree with you...
C#/VB is not the cure to all problems; there are other languages out there!
I have not used a business rules language as such, but I can see real value
in a language where you can show an end user the source code of a set of
business rules like...
On Fri, Feb 26, 2010 at 12:44 PM, Greg Harris harris.gre...@gmail.com wrote:
Silky,
I have to disagree with you...
Be my guest.
C#/VB is not the cure to all problems; there are other languages out there!
I never said otherwise.
I have not used a business rules language as such, but I
On Fri, Feb 26, 2010 at 12:05 PM, Arjang Assadi arjang.ass...@gmail.com wrote:
I wish I could agree with that, but how does what we as software
engineers do differs from the building or bridge engineers, surely
they don't build bridges or building on what they perceive to be the
right way.