viene de javamonamour. org

mas allá de cuestiones de forma me parece interesante la idea

>
> Inheriting code and Software Organ Transplant rejection
>
> it's a well know fact that organ transplant can be very problematic, or
fail, if donor and receiver have a different immune system - or something
like that.
>
> Same thing happens with code that you inherit from another developer
leaving the project.
>
> First reaction is "oh my God, what a pile of unreadable crap"
>
>
>
> And off you go, plugging your nose and refactoring away everything,
javadocking, commenting, eliminating those childish static methods (have
you noticed that people who have no clue of OO programming make everything
static? It's called procedural syndrome...)
>
> The disgust towards the injected (organ) code is so huge that you can't
even read the code until you haven't properly formatted it, inserted spaces
(also, have you noticed that shell script monkey adore NOT putting spaces
between operators and operands?), eliminated the tons of duplicated code,
put hardcoded constants in a property file etc...
>
> The brain rejects that crap, just like your body would reject an alien
organism.
>
> Immune system
>
> That's why adhering to universal coding practices is so important.
>
________________________________________________


Solar-General es una lista abierta a toda la comunidad, sin ninguna moderación, 
por lo que se apela a la tolerancia y al respeto mutuo.
Las opiniones expresadas son responsabilidad exclusiva de sus respectivos/as 
autores/as. La Asociación Solar no se hace responsable por los mensajes 
vertidos, ni representan necesariamente el punto de vista de la Asociación 
Solar.

[email protected]
https://lists.ourproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/solar-general

Responder a