I really wish that these API designers would read and fully understand such papers.
So many enterprise software that I get handed over that are just one dimensional thinking. All these API's are basically simplified SQL query's but then mapped into some web service. Most of them make no sense to even exist because they almost have a one to one relationship to the database.
We are in 2018 and I stills see enterprise code that looked to be developed in the 1990's VB area. One would expect to have more mature developers by now that can write something more structurally than simple Console.WriteLn("Hello World"); functions.
Current education don't create software masters but code monkeys. Masters will violate every single design patter if it prevents them to fulfill the destination.
5 comments
1 u/roznak 21 Dec 2017 22:59
I really wish that these API designers would read and fully understand such papers.
So many enterprise software that I get handed over that are just one dimensional thinking. All these API's are basically simplified SQL query's but then mapped into some web service. Most of them make no sense to even exist because they almost have a one to one relationship to the database.
We are in 2018 and I stills see enterprise code that looked to be developed in the 1990's VB area. One would expect to have more mature developers by now that can write something more structurally than simple Console.WriteLn("Hello World"); functions.
0 u/TheBuddha [OP] 21 Dec 2017 23:01
All I can do is link them and hope for the best.
0 u/roznak 21 Dec 2017 23:18
Current education don't create software masters but code monkeys. Masters will violate every single design patter if it prevents them to fulfill the destination.
0 u/TheBuddha [OP] 21 Dec 2017 23:20
I don't suppose current education covers the majority of topics I link to.
0 u/roznak 22 Dec 2017 15:07
That is why it is good that you link them here.