Well I for one think you've (the developers at ML) done a great job at designing general solutions so far ! Keep it up !
And it looks like (from my testing the last 30 minutes) this general facility xdmp:zip-create() is going to solve a lot of my problems. Thanks ! -David From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Walter Underwood Sent: Sunday, April 18, 2010 11:41 PM To: General Mark Logic Developer Discussion Subject: Re: [MarkLogic Dev General] RE: PassingauthenticationinformationinaURL We all want to design general solutions, myself included, but we also think really hard about solving the problem in front of us. YAGNI is a great help in keeping focused. Guessing the future is really, really hard, even after thirty years in the business. My "general" solutions don't usually fit what what people really want next year. They end up as baggage. Focused solutions make people happy and are easy to understand and extend. Every time. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/You_ain't_gonna_need_it wunder On Apr 18, 2010, at 6:45 PM, Lee, David wrote: The opposite design principal is to try to design things so that you dont have to reemployment similar things over and over again. I'm sure there are *some things* in ML that are 'general purpose' ... In fact the *entire product* is general purpose, generally :). -David From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Walter Underwood Sent: Sunday, April 18, 2010 9:34 PM To: General Mark Logic Developer Discussion Subject: Re: [MarkLogic Dev General] RE: PassingauthenticationinformationinaURL On Apr 18, 2010, at 6:23 PM, Lee, David wrote: This is all somewhat pedantic because in this case I don't really need high security for the images, just was hoping for a general solution that could be reused 'next time' when I really want security. There is a principle in agile programming named "You Ain't Gonna Need It", or YAGNI. It means, only design and implement what you need. Designing general-purpose mechanisms based on guesses about the future makes the current code more complicated. Usually, implementing exactly what you need makes it easier to implement what you need next time. wunder -- Walter Underwood Lead Engineer [email protected]
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