# from A. Pagaltzis
# on Monday 29 October 2007 15:25:

>* Andy Lester <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2007-10-29 23:15]:
>> Best is the enemy of the good.

No. "Best" is what "the good" should aim to be.  If "best" is better 
than "good", why choose the worst of the two?

>And next time this will be handy, it will also be too big a
>change vs. an incremental suboptimal solution, and the overnext
>time as well, and ever on.

Yep.  What we usually end up with when someone says "the perfect should 
not stand in the way of the good" is "almost-works standing in the way 
of good-enough" or, as with the toolchain:

  "forever-backwards-compatible-with-halfway-almost-ok."

--Eric
-- 
Chicken farmer's observation:  Clunk is the past tense of cluck.
---------------------------------------------------
    http://scratchcomputing.com
---------------------------------------------------

Reply via email to