• andisent@lemm.ee
    ·
    1 year ago
    1. Duplication of Knowledge is the Worst

    2. Code is a Liability

    3. Senior Developers: Trust but Verify

    4. TDD Is Legit, and It’s a Game-Changer

    5. Evidence is King

  • mrkite@programming.dev
    ·
    1 year ago

    I spent about 10 of those in roles where my primary function was to write code. The other 10 have involved managing programmers, coaching them, consulting with organizations about how to manage them, running a codebase assessment practice and these days, well, actually content marketing.

    Therein lies the biggest lie in development. There is no career path. I've been programming professionally for 25 years, and in all 25 of those years my primary function was to write code, because I turned down any promotion that would put me in management and away from doing what I love.

  • Deely@programming.dev
    ·
    1 year ago

    Erm. Duplication of code is ok. Removing absolutely every duplicate function is just premature optimization imho.

    If you have two different customers with slightly different workflow then go ahead and create two mostly the same functions. When you will have 4 different customers with slightly different workflow, then its a time for refactoring, maybe extract basic same functionality into separate function/object, maybe introduce dynamic workflow using finite automata, maybe extract these functionality to separate modules.. but never do it prematurily.

    Imho, sometimes ,removing of duplication very much increases complexity and code became hard to understand and hard to modify.

    • RagingNerdoholic@lemmy.ca
      ·
      edit-2
      1 year ago

      https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rule_of_three_(computer_programming)

      Copy for twice, abstract for thrice. I've followed this since I learned it and it's served me well.

      Edit: Wikipedia links are fucky

    • avalokitesha@discuss.tchncs.de
      ·
      1 year ago

      My understanding of that article was that it was not necessarily about duplicated code, but duplicated data. If you have two places storing the same data, and different parts of your app go to each of it, you need to somehow keep them in sync, and that's often a pain.

      I'm trying to be very rigorous about avoiding that, duplicated code I'm a bit less rigorous about.

      • Von_Broheim@programming.dev
        ·
        edit-2
        1 year ago

        Microservices and document db's go brrrrrrr. Data duplication is completely fine as long as there is only one source of truth that can be updated, all copies must be read only. Then the copies should either regularly poll the source or the source should publish update events that the copies can consume to stay in sync. It's simple stuff but keeps your system way more available and fast than having multiple services talk to a shared db or worse, multiple services constantly fetching data through a proxy.