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I'm going through all sorts of WPF documentation, and I'm feeling unnecessarily confused. The term 'business logic' is scattered throughout it, as if everyone should know what it is.

I can see what business logic is, according to this question here: What exactly consists of 'Business Logic' in an application?

But where did the term come from? Why is it called 'business logic' and not, say, 'core logic' or 'main algorithms' or any other more generic terms? Very few of the programs I write have anything to do with 'business logic', and when I think of 'business logic' I think of things handling credit card transactions, customer database maintenance, and the like. In other words, things that relate to a fraction of the entirety of computer science. When I write an imaging application, there is no 'business' involved, no customers, no money-based transactions, nothing of the sort. So saying that I have 'business logic' really confuses me, since I'm not conducting business, I'm processing images.

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    "Business Logic" is an oxymoron, no?
    – OMG Ponies
    Sep 17, 2009 at 20:47
  • Sure, the nomenclature was probably coined by people discussing commercial applications. But the phrase itself isn't limited in any way to commercial applications. A physics application, for example, would probably include most of the formulas and constraints (like terminal velocity) as "business logic." The term is in no way limited to actual business applications, any more than a guinea pig is a pig, or a peanut a pea.
    – AaronSieb
    Sep 17, 2009 at 21:46
  • here is the nice definition I found so far
    – swiftBoy
    Apr 17, 2013 at 6:26
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    Ppl shdoul realy think about terms more when theyr aware of influencing the name in the future. Since with new technologies, stuff is getting more and more complex and ilogical concepts will become harder and harder to understand. It might seems as minor problem, but if you realize that it can take you 20-30 more minutes tu understand waht business logic realy is because of badly chosen name and you need to learn thousands of other concepts out there, it is realy big amount of time used inefficiently
    – Srneczek
    May 18, 2015 at 11:41
  • @AaronSieb: "You seem to understand the basic concept, why does the etymology bother you?". Looks like the OP had difficulty understanding the concept because of the badly chosen name. By the way, I have made the same experience. Naming should bother any software developer because good names are one of the best tools for reducing complexity. And the name in question suggests that the people who coined and adoped it had a very limited understanding of what software actually is. Oct 23, 2020 at 9:50

13 Answers 13

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For the same reason that the end of a gun which the bullets come out of is called the “business end”. It's where the primary action happens.

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If you were a professional graphic designer, there certainly would be business involved with using your imaging application - your job is your business!

So "business logic" refers to the parts of the code that define how the user conducts his business (in this case, manipulating images).

Don't forget that back in the day, all software was "business software" - no-one could afford the expensive equipment and skills required to write software for anything other than business purposes. It if didn't make money or save money for a business, it didn't get written.

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  • by that definition, then the 'business logic' would be how the designer designs graphics, ie, the UI of how s/he manipulates images on the screen, rather than the actual implementation of, say, a noise reduction algorithm, or the logic that binds the algorithm to the interface. Is that what the term means? It's not the same answer that @Jonathan Patt gave or the answer marked as correct in the question I referenced.
    – mmr
    Sep 17, 2009 at 20:45
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    @mmr: No, I don't think so. The UI is a largely unwanted abstraction between the user and the image. It's what happens to the image that the user cares about, not the UI. Sep 17, 2009 at 20:50
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    @RichieHindle-- saying that the UI is an 'unwanted abstraction' is like saying that using hands to paint a painting is an 'unwanted abstraction' from the final production of a painting. The UI defines how the user will use the program, especially in imaging, so it would seem to be extremely key to 'conducting business.'
    – mmr
    Sep 17, 2009 at 20:54
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    @mmr: Absolutely, using your hands to paint is an unwanted abstraction, if you're painting for money. If a professional painter could make the painting appear on the canvas by an act of will, and save all that tedious messing about with brushes, he would. The key point about business logic vs. UI is that it's the end result that makes the money, not the UI mechanism by which you achieved that result. The UI is very important, because its job is to make the end result quick and easy to achieve, but it's not the "business", it's a means to an end. Sep 17, 2009 at 20:58
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    @RichieHindle: As I said below to @Simeon Pilgrim, to me, 'back in the day' in computing means 'space shuttle' and 'winning world war 2 with codebreaking'-- neither of which involve business, and when it was suspected that only the five richest kings of Europe could afford a computer (Simpsons reference). Almost all of my coding has been science related, even if it's the business of science, and never just for business' sake. That's why the term seems so limited to me.
    – mmr
    Sep 17, 2009 at 21:23
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Not sure, but I think the term should be replaced with domain logic instead.

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You could have called it "core logic", but I believe that the first (well-known) multi-tiered apps were actually written for insurance or banking, hence the term "business logic". From there, the pattern took form, and the naming stuck.

Had the first multi-tiered apps been a research project or something, it probably would have been called "core logic".

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The origin of the term is in business software, where business specific rules were separated in their own modules. That merely got transferred to all the other software.

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  • Yeah, but why? There is a lot more to coding than business-specific rules.
    – mmr
    Sep 17, 2009 at 20:48
  • The vast majority of pracising professional programmers are either writing software for a business, or, writing software which will be sold to a business. These may be highly technical programs but the end goal is to support a bisiness process. Even in the world of PCs there are far more Wintel machines owned and deployed by businesses than there are 'home' PCs. Sep 23, 2009 at 6:14
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When I write an imaging application, there is no 'business' involved, no customers, no money-based transactions, nothing of the sort. So saying that I have 'business logic' really confuses me, since I'm not conducting business, I'm processing images.

Furthermore, much of the advice about presentation and data starts going south too, as operations such as effects and filters which would be extras in a 'presentation layer' in a business application are the core of yours.

"Visualisation", "Engine" and "Persistent storage", are quite common names for the layers in the simulations I tend to work on. There's no problem using names meaningful in your domain. But then I get confused about all the job ads for SAS programmers, as that means something else in a UK defence setting; if you want to talk to business people you have to translate for them.

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    Actually, most of those ads are for what you thought. The ability to successfully debug the firmware of a missile while rappelling from a helicopter is so rare they have to keep advertising them all over the place.
    – soru
    Sep 18, 2009 at 0:07
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Thinking about early computer systems, like credit card processing, there are two large parts to the code, the parts doing the io, talking to the back-ends, tape, etc, and the parts doing the logic of the business, rules like, is the card valid, has the limit been exceeded.

Another way to think about it, it's the things a business person would say are the 'rules' to capture.

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  • When I think 'early computer systems', I think ENIAC, codebreaking, and the Space Shuttle being the 'perfect codebase' from a software engineering standpoint. Hardly anything to do with credit card transactions, except inasmuch as those transactions should be encrypted.
    – mmr
    Sep 17, 2009 at 20:47
  • ENIAC is ancient, nearly pre-computing, when you consider what the word "computer" means today. Sep 17, 2009 at 20:49
  • But that's when Turing and the like were defining modern computing-- hence why that's why I think about those systems as 'early computer systems'
    – mmr
    Sep 17, 2009 at 20:56
  • I think of those as first, precursor or calculation machines, for this answer I'm meaning early DEC,VAX, DP-x deployments type thing. Sep 19, 2009 at 2:26
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Business logic is that part of an application where "how" is should work is determined by someone other than the programming team. Usually it is the code that does what the customer wants to get done. The term generally only applies to in house software built for a non-IT group.

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  • Then why do I see it showing up for very generic documentation like for WPF? That's a framework that should be for any kind of app, not just in-house stuff and not just for business work.
    – mmr
    Sep 17, 2009 at 20:51
  • Because obviously the writer of the documentation disagrees with you and think WPF is for business work. That is Microsoft's most common (highest paying) client type, is it not? Sep 18, 2009 at 19:14
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I think many times its sarcastic, because business logic is not always logical. its done certain way only, because business wants it that way - many times its not the best way. you can fight with them and (if youre lucky) make them see the light or just accept the fact that its business logic and be ready to change it when they realize they made mistake.

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It is a term used mainly for Line of business applications & one more way people know of it is CRUD app (create, read, update, delete).

I think it means the class(es) contain the logic of how the business process works for given business process(es).

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I think I agree with DVK - IIRC, at the time, the whole Data->Logic->Presentation layer thing was an "enterprise" (basically: business) software buzzword.

Now that every goddamn web page should be three-tiered, it's much more common.

You also have to remember that while there's a lot of code other than business code, the amount of business code is huge, and a huge business (har har) as well. It's not really surprising that some terms originated there.

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I think nmr is quite correct. I'm teaching my HCI software engineering course, and I need to encourage students to stop thinking of "Business Logic" and think more about MVC.

Quite often, their previous professors would tell them that, "Underneath the HCI is the BIDness Logic"

Can we please LOSE the business logic? Since software rarely has NO user interface, we can say, for the rest of the software, there is the View, the user Control, and the Model.

And there will be message passing between these three entities. Which are, by the way, "output", "input"/"state". Just as Turing (and Church) had taught us.

So... let's lose 'the bidness logic'

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Just like the pretty you goes to the bathroom to do your business, your pretty GUI goes to the logic to do its business..

(Sorry, couldn't resist :) )

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