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Understanding Software

You're reading from   Understanding Software Max Kanat-Alexander on simplicity, coding, and how to suck less as a programmer

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788628815
Length 278 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Max Kanat-Alexander Max Kanat-Alexander
Author Profile Icon Max Kanat-Alexander
Max Kanat-Alexander
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Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

1. Table of Contents FREE CHAPTER
2. Understanding Software
3. Credits
4. About the Author
5. www.PacktPub.com
6. Customer Feedback
7. Foreword
8. One. Principles for Programmers 9. Two. Software Complexity and its Causes 10. Three. Simplicity and Software Design 11. Four. Debugging 12. Five. Engineering in Teams 13. Six. Understanding Software 14. Seven. Suck Less 15. Index

Chapter 7. When Is Backwards-Compatibility Not Worth It?

This title might seem a bit like a contradiction to the previous chapter…and of course, you really shouldn't break your API, if you can help it. But sometimes, maintaining backwards compatibility for any area of your application can lead to a point of diminishing returns. This applies to everything about a program, not just its API.

A great example of the backwards-compatibility problem is Perl. If you read the summaries of the perl5-porters mailing list, or if you're familiar with the history of the Perl internals in general, you'll have some idea of what I mean.

Perl is full of support for strange syntaxes that really, nobody should be using anymore. For example, in Perl, you're supposed to call methods on an object like $object->method(). But there's also a syntax called the "indirect object syntax" where you can do method $object. Not method($object) though – only the...

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