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Uncle Bob nails it again

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  • Kornfeld Eliyahu PeterK Kornfeld Eliyahu Peter

    The problem is not we have or have not, or how much the progress is...The problem is that with far too many poorly educated 'professional' in lot of cases we sanctify the tool and not the solution...(A good solution is a good solution not matter what was the language/technology stack we used to create it) With that attitude we created a fashion-driven culture (just like with almost everything else)...We no morce choose toolkit based on knowledge only, but also how shiny it is...And when it comes to justify it (for instance to move from C to Go), we call it progress... For a most concrete example - I should take over a pro-bono project, developed using Angular as a SPA...I fill very bad about it, because that SPA contains over 200! actual pages tossed into one! file!!!

    Skipper: We'll fix it. Alex: Fix it? How you gonna fix this? Skipper: Grit, spit and a whole lotta duct tape.

    J Offline
    J Offline
    Jeremy Falcon
    wrote on last edited by
    #15

    To this I totally agree. Comparing it to fashion being very apropos... yay the shiny new button syndrome.

    Jeremy Falcon

    1 Reply Last reply
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    • J Jeremy Falcon

      Mark_Wallace wrote:

      OO? Sure, it works, but I was coding objects in COBOL more than 30 years ago, without having to change anything about the language.

      This is the voice of experience speaking. I remember thinking something similar for my C projects. Took me a while to jump unto the OOP bandwagon being so awesome it cures cancer. Just like it's gonna take people a while these days to jump onto the next thing. Change is slow.

      Mark_Wallace wrote:

      An improved IDE is worth a hundred times more than any new language, as is any library/framework that reduces the level of detail that you have to delve into.

      Agreed. Although, having gotten used to some newer languages (in web dev at least) it's rough to go back.

      Jeremy Falcon

      M Offline
      M Offline
      Mark_Wallace
      wrote on last edited by
      #16

      Jeremy Falcon wrote:

      Change is slow.

      There's the rub. Change that doesn't really change anything, but only adds a few shortcuts, isn't real change, so why bother? If the very same shortcuts can be added to just about any language, with a Lot less effort than getting everyone to learn the p!ssballing intricacies, foibles, and shortfalls of a new one, then you've saved enough to pay for everyone's Christmas bonus.

      Jeremy Falcon wrote:

      having gotten :mad: used to some newer languages (in web dev at least) it's rough to go back

      So use 'em! The language doesn't make a blind bit of difference to the user/customer/visitor, so twiddle with the ones and zeroes in the way that's most efficient for you!

      I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!

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      • R raddevus

        CDP1802 wrote:

        Finally someone who says it. We are not making progress, we are going in circles mighty fast.

        The glass is half full...and there is a hole in the bottom. :laugh: :laugh: Here's a question-guess -- Do you work for a government somewhere? :laugh: :laugh: :laugh: It's only not funny, if you do. Umm...do you think we are better off than the people who read machine language zeros and ones? Maybe a bit. Are we any better off than the Assembly language programmers? Maybe another shade. I understand your meaning though. This is NOT the problem : Creating software that doesn't work. THe problem IS:

        creating software that works, but does the wrong thing.

        :-D

        My book, Launch Your Android App, is available at Amazon.com.

        L Offline
        L Offline
        Lost User
        wrote on last edited by
        #17

        raddevus wrote:

        ere's a question-guess -- Do you work for a government somewhere? :laugh: :laugh: :laugh:

        Done that, but that had little to do with programming. More with Mach 3.5

        raddevus wrote:

        Umm...do you think we are better off than the people who read machine language zeros and ones? Maybe a bit. Are we any better off than the Assembly language programmers? Maybe another shade. I understand your meaning though.

        Guess what I'm doing right at this moment? I'm writing good old assembly code. Visual Studio as code editor, antique subroutines I wrote many years ago, a simple makefile, an almost 40 year old debugger and an emulator for the elderly target computer. Much too comfortable. I should go over to the old computer and use the hex keyboard. :-)

        The language is JavaScript. that of Mordor, which I will not utter here
        This is Javascript. If you put big wheels and a racing stripe on a golf cart, it's still a fucking golf cart.
        "I don't know, extraterrestrial?" "You mean like from space?" "No, from Canada." If software development were a circus, we would all be the clowns.

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        • M Mark_Wallace

          Jeremy Falcon wrote:

          Change is slow.

          There's the rub. Change that doesn't really change anything, but only adds a few shortcuts, isn't real change, so why bother? If the very same shortcuts can be added to just about any language, with a Lot less effort than getting everyone to learn the p!ssballing intricacies, foibles, and shortfalls of a new one, then you've saved enough to pay for everyone's Christmas bonus.

          Jeremy Falcon wrote:

          having gotten :mad: used to some newer languages (in web dev at least) it's rough to go back

          So use 'em! The language doesn't make a blind bit of difference to the user/customer/visitor, so twiddle with the ones and zeroes in the way that's most efficient for you!

          I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!

          J Offline
          J Offline
          Jeremy Falcon
          wrote on last edited by
          #18

          Mark_Wallace wrote:

          Change that doesn't really change anything, but only adds a few shortcuts, isn't real change, so why bother? If the very same shortcuts can be added to just about any language, with a Lot less effort than getting everyone to learn the p!ssballing intricacies, foibles, and shortfalls of a new one, then you've saved enough to pay for everyone's Christmas bonus.

          I agree, which is what I was speaking about earlier in this thread. Not all change is warranted or justified, but there times when it is. Turning a blind eye to change is called growing old and not adapting to the current world. Living in yesterday. So, it doesn't mean it can be dismissed altogether.

          Mark_Wallace wrote:

          The language doesn't make a blind bit of difference to the user/customer/visitor, so twiddle with the ones and zeroes in the way that's most efficient for you!

          You're preaching to the choir. I agree. My point with this though is sometimes your environment changes, and for the better. Refusing to think there is another way that may be more beneficial is just a foolish as the new shiny button chasing. It's about balance. Sometimes things need to be questioned. Sometimes not. But then sometimes so.

          Jeremy Falcon

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          • V Vark111

            raddevus wrote:

            Tell that to the surgeon who says, "Oops" while trying a new innovative procedure during your surgery.

            Well, that's a good point, and maybe what Uncle Bob is railing about - if you'll permit me to extend the metaphor - is the fact that far too many of us surgeons are trying out these new innovative techniques on live patients (live projects), and not spending enough time trying them out on pigs and sheep (Test/PoC projects)? That's a valid point of view, but it doesn't seem to come across in his post. His article seems more along the lines of "if existing tools don't support it, then don't even bother".

            R Offline
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            raddevus
            wrote on last edited by
            #19

            Vark111 wrote:

            but it doesn't seem to come across in his post

            I definitely see your point of view. Great discussion. Thanks for adding to it. Your additional examples were really great.:thumbsup:

            My book, Launch Your Android App, is available at Amazon.com.

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            • J Jeremy Falcon

              Well to that extent I agree. Personally, I still think C is a viable language for certain projects, and I'd never want to throw it away. But, C is also one of my favorite languages with a special place in my geek heart; so I'm already biased towards it. I have no desire to use COBOL, even though I'm sure decades ago the same thing was said of COBOL as we're saying about OOP right now. I'm sure it has its merits too and served a purpose as well an evolutionary step towards the next. Doesn't mean I'd use it today though. Not that I'm anti-OOP, can't be in this day in age. Guess it's all about balance. Don't change for change's sake, but change for something that's genuinely better. Unfortunately, that's not always the case and some folks get caught up in the hoopla of new buzzwords and changing because it's cool - not necessarily prudent. So, I totally get it, but not to the extent we become a dinosaur and thus the next generation of COBOL guys who aren't relevant anymore.

              Jeremy Falcon

              R Offline
              R Offline
              raddevus
              wrote on last edited by
              #20

              Great discussion and I agree with what you are saying. I really love C too and have been writing embedded AVR-C for Atmel (ATMega328) chips just recently.

              Jeremy Falcon wrote:

              So, I totally get it, but not to the extent we become a dinosaur and thus the next generation of COBOL guys who aren't relevant anymore.

              Totally agree with this too. Some people hang on to the past just because they don't want to change. Balance is key. :thumbsup:

              My book, Launch Your Android App, is available at Amazon.com.

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              • R raddevus

                Great discussion and I agree with what you are saying. I really love C too and have been writing embedded AVR-C for Atmel (ATMega328) chips just recently.

                Jeremy Falcon wrote:

                So, I totally get it, but not to the extent we become a dinosaur and thus the next generation of COBOL guys who aren't relevant anymore.

                Totally agree with this too. Some people hang on to the past just because they don't want to change. Balance is key. :thumbsup:

                My book, Launch Your Android App, is available at Amazon.com.

                J Offline
                J Offline
                Jeremy Falcon
                wrote on last edited by
                #21

                :thumbsup:

                Jeremy Falcon

                1 Reply Last reply
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                • L Lost User

                  raddevus wrote:

                  ere's a question-guess -- Do you work for a government somewhere? :laugh: :laugh: :laugh:

                  Done that, but that had little to do with programming. More with Mach 3.5

                  raddevus wrote:

                  Umm...do you think we are better off than the people who read machine language zeros and ones? Maybe a bit. Are we any better off than the Assembly language programmers? Maybe another shade. I understand your meaning though.

                  Guess what I'm doing right at this moment? I'm writing good old assembly code. Visual Studio as code editor, antique subroutines I wrote many years ago, a simple makefile, an almost 40 year old debugger and an emulator for the elderly target computer. Much too comfortable. I should go over to the old computer and use the hex keyboard. :-)

                  The language is JavaScript. that of Mordor, which I will not utter here
                  This is Javascript. If you put big wheels and a racing stripe on a golf cart, it's still a fucking golf cart.
                  "I don't know, extraterrestrial?" "You mean like from space?" "No, from Canada." If software development were a circus, we would all be the clowns.

                  R Offline
                  R Offline
                  raddevus
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #22

                  CDP1802 wrote:

                  Guess what I'm doing right at this moment? I'm writing good old assembly code

                  That really is very cool. I'm writing AVR-C (on the GNU C Toolchain) for embedded development myself. When it's compiled down to the hex file I often go and look at the straight hex, because I am weird. :D Im finishing my article for codeproject which uses an ATMega328, bluetooth and a relay module and it has straight C code in it for the embedded. Lots of fun. Edit The article is posted to CP: Never Buy A Garage Door Remote Again: Open Your Door With Your Android Phone (via Bluetooth)[^]

                  My book, Launch Your Android App, is available at Amazon.com.

                  L S 2 Replies Last reply
                  0
                  • D Duncan Edwards Jones

                    The Churn[^] - why the shiny and new isn't always better than the established and battle hardened.

                    R Offline
                    R Offline
                    Ryan Peden
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #23

                    I think that it happens mostly because it's more fun to gripe about languages and tools than it is to really understand your users and create what they need. Also, to steal a line from Battlestar Galactica: all of this has happened before, and all of it will happen again. I used to hate waiting for Maven to download half the internet when first firing up a semi-complex Java on a new machine. So I'd go and gripe about how Java sucks, Maven sucks, and JS is awesome because I can write code that just works without needing a billion dependencies. Now, if I clone a semi-complex React or Angular project and run 'npm install', I have to wait for NPM to download half the internet before I can do anything.

                    1 Reply Last reply
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                    • R raddevus

                      CDP1802 wrote:

                      Guess what I'm doing right at this moment? I'm writing good old assembly code

                      That really is very cool. I'm writing AVR-C (on the GNU C Toolchain) for embedded development myself. When it's compiled down to the hex file I often go and look at the straight hex, because I am weird. :D Im finishing my article for codeproject which uses an ATMega328, bluetooth and a relay module and it has straight C code in it for the embedded. Lots of fun. Edit The article is posted to CP: Never Buy A Garage Door Remote Again: Open Your Door With Your Android Phone (via Bluetooth)[^]

                      My book, Launch Your Android App, is available at Amazon.com.

                      L Offline
                      L Offline
                      Lost User
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #24

                      Have some random code from the listing after assembling the sources, then:

                      48D : EC DSP_ShiftExit: SEX RC ; store the shifted bytes in the video buffer
                      48E : 8B GLO RB
                      48F : F3 XOR
                      490 : 5C STR RC
                      491 : 1C INC RC
                      492 : 9B GHI RB
                      493 : F3 XOR
                      494 : 5C STR RC
                      495 : E2 SEX R2
                      496 : 8C GLO RC ; advance the video buffer pointer
                      497 : FC 07 ADI 07H
                      499 : AC PLO RC
                      49A : 9C GHI RC
                      49B : 7C 00 ADCI 00H
                      49D : BC PHI RC
                      49E : 30 6E BR DSP_ByteLoop
                      4A0 : 12 DSP_Exit INC R2
                      4A1 : D5 SEP R5

                      This kind of stuff never changes. Such old computers are very much like the modern microcontroller kits. Everything comes back sooner or later and it's actually quite important to learn what you can do with a few bytes of machine code, un restricted by conventions, operating systems or standards.

                      The language is JavaScript. that of Mordor, which I will not utter here
                      This is Javascript. If you put big wheels and a racing stripe on a golf cart, it's still a fucking golf cart.
                      "I don't know, extraterrestrial?" "You mean like from space?" "No, from Canada." If software development were a circus, we would all be the clowns.

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • J Jeremy Falcon

                        Mark_Wallace wrote:

                        Change that doesn't really change anything, but only adds a few shortcuts, isn't real change, so why bother? If the very same shortcuts can be added to just about any language, with a Lot less effort than getting everyone to learn the p!ssballing intricacies, foibles, and shortfalls of a new one, then you've saved enough to pay for everyone's Christmas bonus.

                        I agree, which is what I was speaking about earlier in this thread. Not all change is warranted or justified, but there times when it is. Turning a blind eye to change is called growing old and not adapting to the current world. Living in yesterday. So, it doesn't mean it can be dismissed altogether.

                        Mark_Wallace wrote:

                        The language doesn't make a blind bit of difference to the user/customer/visitor, so twiddle with the ones and zeroes in the way that's most efficient for you!

                        You're preaching to the choir. I agree. My point with this though is sometimes your environment changes, and for the better. Refusing to think there is another way that may be more beneficial is just a foolish as the new shiny button chasing. It's about balance. Sometimes things need to be questioned. Sometimes not. But then sometimes so.

                        Jeremy Falcon

                        M Offline
                        M Offline
                        Mark_Wallace
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #25

                        Jeremy Falcon wrote:

                        growing old

                        Hey! I just had my 17th birthday, a few days ago*! * Who the Hell wants to be an adult?

                        I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!

                        J J 2 Replies Last reply
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                        • M Mark_Wallace

                          Jeremy Falcon wrote:

                          growing old

                          Hey! I just had my 17th birthday, a few days ago*! * Who the Hell wants to be an adult?

                          I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!

                          J Offline
                          J Offline
                          Jeremy Falcon
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #26

                          Mark_Wallace wrote:

                          Hey! I just had my 17th birthday, a few days ago*!

                          Oh wow, well happy birthday man.

                          Mark_Wallace wrote:

                          Who the Hell wants to be an adult?

                          It comes in handy when you want to buy alcohol, and you learn stuff. Wisdom and all that. Only downside is you die.

                          Jeremy Falcon

                          M 1 Reply Last reply
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                          • Kornfeld Eliyahu PeterK Kornfeld Eliyahu Peter

                            The problem is not we have or have not, or how much the progress is...The problem is that with far too many poorly educated 'professional' in lot of cases we sanctify the tool and not the solution...(A good solution is a good solution not matter what was the language/technology stack we used to create it) With that attitude we created a fashion-driven culture (just like with almost everything else)...We no morce choose toolkit based on knowledge only, but also how shiny it is...And when it comes to justify it (for instance to move from C to Go), we call it progress... For a most concrete example - I should take over a pro-bono project, developed using Angular as a SPA...I fill very bad about it, because that SPA contains over 200! actual pages tossed into one! file!!!

                            Skipper: We'll fix it. Alex: Fix it? How you gonna fix this? Skipper: Grit, spit and a whole lotta duct tape.

                            F Offline
                            F Offline
                            Foothill
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #27

                            Kornfeld Eliyahu Peter wrote:

                            A good solution is a good solution not matter what was the language/technology stack we used to create it

                            That's true. No matter what language you used to compile a program, it's still just small voltage variations being clocked through logic circuits in the end.

                            if (Object.DividedByZero == true) { Universe.Implode(); } Meus ratio ex fortis machina. Simplicitatis de formae ac munus. -Foothill, 2016

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                            • J Jeremy Falcon

                              Mark_Wallace wrote:

                              Hey! I just had my 17th birthday, a few days ago*!

                              Oh wow, well happy birthday man.

                              Mark_Wallace wrote:

                              Who the Hell wants to be an adult?

                              It comes in handy when you want to buy alcohol, and you learn stuff. Wisdom and all that. Only downside is you die.

                              Jeremy Falcon

                              M Offline
                              M Offline
                              Mark_Wallace
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #28

                              Jeremy Falcon wrote:

                              It comes in handy when you want to buy alcohol

                              Luckily, I'm 17 that looks like 57, so I can get away with it. The fact that calendars say I'm actually 57 is bollocks. I don't live by Gregorian calendar rules; they're way to old to take seriously.

                              I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!

                              J 1 Reply Last reply
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                              • M Mark_Wallace

                                Jeremy Falcon wrote:

                                It comes in handy when you want to buy alcohol

                                Luckily, I'm 17 that looks like 57, so I can get away with it. The fact that calendars say I'm actually 57 is bollocks. I don't live by Gregorian calendar rules; they're way to old to take seriously.

                                I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!

                                J Offline
                                J Offline
                                Jeremy Falcon
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #29

                                Ah I see, well in leap years, you're like what 14? Getting younger every day.

                                Jeremy Falcon

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                                • V Vark111

                                  I usually agree with Uncle Bob, and I understand his over-arching point here, but this article (especially the closing bit) sounds suspiciously like "let's just stop all the new stuff". And that doesn't sit well with me. The day you give up trying to innovate is the day you become a fossil. Regardless if you're successful or not, the attempt is often far more important than the result.

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                                  jesarg
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #30

                                  Uncle Bob emphasizes how much we lose by continually changing frameworks, languages, libraries, etc. When we keep the same language, framework, and libraries for a longer period of time, we get better IDE's that handle them, better documentation that describes them, better stability and robustness (and maybe even better new libraries that work with them). We should only change when the benefits of the change are high compared to the costs of the change. We're in a time period now when the benefits are low and the costs are high.

                                  1 Reply Last reply
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                                  • D Duncan Edwards Jones

                                    The Churn[^] - why the shiny and new isn't always better than the established and battle hardened.

                                    M Offline
                                    M Offline
                                    Marc Clifton
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #31

                                    > Every year. though we apply massive effort, we make less progress than the year before; because every year we get closer and closer to the asymptote. No, every year we get new newbie asses. ;) Marc

                                    Imperative to Functional Programming Succinctly Contributors Wanted for Higher Order Programming Project! Learning to code with python is like learning to swim with those little arm floaties. It gives you undeserved confidence and will eventually drown you. - DangerBunny

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                                    • J Jeremy Falcon

                                      I agree. He sounds old and resistant to change. I'm sure if he was coding before OOP came around he'd be saying the same thing about OOP being a waste of time.

                                      Jeremy Falcon

                                      R Offline
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                                      Ri_
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #32

                                      LOL, I suspect Uncle Bob is one of the people who came up with the Agile Manifesto. I know he's a huge fan of Agile and all things TDD. Resistant to change...? :rolleyes: Back in the 60s and 70s when programming became a thing, there was some scientific rigour behind it. It came about at Universities, business labs and places of learning. Nowadays anyone with a computer connection can become a "programmer". Hell, I did! :laugh: But the mantra nowadays seems to be "give me a way to do it faster and without so much hassle" (i.e. so I don't have to fix so many bugs). No one makes an effort to learn to program properly anymore, so they just keep sticking language and framework bandaids over the problems. So yes, churn.

                                      M J 2 Replies Last reply
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                                      • R Ri_

                                        LOL, I suspect Uncle Bob is one of the people who came up with the Agile Manifesto. I know he's a huge fan of Agile and all things TDD. Resistant to change...? :rolleyes: Back in the 60s and 70s when programming became a thing, there was some scientific rigour behind it. It came about at Universities, business labs and places of learning. Nowadays anyone with a computer connection can become a "programmer". Hell, I did! :laugh: But the mantra nowadays seems to be "give me a way to do it faster and without so much hassle" (i.e. so I don't have to fix so many bugs). No one makes an effort to learn to program properly anymore, so they just keep sticking language and framework bandaids over the problems. So yes, churn.

                                        M Offline
                                        M Offline
                                        Matthew Trout
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #33

                                        He absolutely did.

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                                        • L Lost User

                                          Finally someone who says it. We are not making progress, we are going in circles mighty fast.

                                          The language is JavaScript. that of Mordor, which I will not utter here
                                          This is Javascript. If you put big wheels and a racing stripe on a golf cart, it's still a fucking golf cart.
                                          "I don't know, extraterrestrial?" "You mean like from space?" "No, from Canada." If software development were a circus, we would all be the clowns.

                                          W Offline
                                          W Offline
                                          W Balboos GHB
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #34

                                          Not only are we running in circles, but even talking about running in circles is an old story[^].

                                          Ravings en masse^

                                          "The difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has its limits." - Albert Einstein

                                          "If you are searching for perfection in others, then you seek disappointment. If you are seek perfection in yourself, then you will find failure." - Balboos HaGadol Mar 2010

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