363
votes

This is definitely subjective, but I'd like to try to avoid it becoming argumentative. I think it could be an interesting question if people treat it appropriately.

The idea for this question came from the comment thread from my answer to the "What are five things you hate about your favorite language?" question. I contended that classes in C# should be sealed by default - I won't put my reasoning in the question, but I might write a fuller explanation as an answer to this question. I was surprised at the heat of the discussion in the comments (25 comments currently).

So, what contentious opinions do you hold? I'd rather avoid the kind of thing which ends up being pretty religious with relatively little basis (e.g. brace placing) but examples might include things like "unit testing isn't actually terribly helpful" or "public fields are okay really". The important thing (to me, anyway) is that you've got reasons behind your opinions.

Please present your opinion and reasoning - I would encourage people to vote for opinions which are well-argued and interesting, whether or not you happen to agree with them.

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21
votes

It's okay to be Mort

Not everyone is a "rockstar" programmer; some of us do it because it's a good living, and we don't care about all the latest fads and trends; we just want to do our jobs.

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  • I agree, with the caveat (and I'm turning and looking in the direction of several teams in Redmond, Washington) that Mort is often unfairly scoped and not always well understood.
    – Gabriel
    Jun 1, 2009 at 19:10
  • 1
    I'm with you Wayne, though to stay in the industry, I think we all need to go Elvis and Einstein at times. And we need to put in effort outside of work too. I rested on my laurels for a while (got married, moved, had other stuff going on) and I can see tech moving beyond me and now I have to play catch up. Tech is moving too fast for extra effort not to be put in. I'm learning and doing side projects again, and I'm having fun. But I do resent the 14 hour a day folks. They will blossom, whither, and then fade. Balance is the key, but the day of being exclusively a Mort are numbered.
    – infocyde
    Jun 25, 2009 at 21:36
21
votes

Don't comment your code

Comments are not code and therefore when things change it's very easy to not change the comment that explained the code. Instead I prefer to refactor the crap out of code to a point that there is no reason for a comment. An example:

if(data == null)  // First time on the page

to:

bool firstTimeOnPage = data == null;
if(firstTimeOnPage)

The only time I really comment is when it's a TODO or explaining why

Widget.GetData(); // only way to grab data, TODO: extract interface or wrapper
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  • 14
    Icky. Don't declare a variable if you're only going to use it once. Your suggestion is not much better than, "int i,this_is_a_counter;". If you're forced to add extra code to get rid of comments, you've made things MORE complicated!
    – Brian
    Jan 12, 2009 at 22:21
  • 2
    I'm sick of reading this crap. The reality is that the large majority of code out there is badly written, let alone reasonably refactored. If you can't write decent (understandable) code at least have the decency of adding comments. Jan 26, 2009 at 10:05
  • 8
    Why are one-time variables bad? They explain what you do, they don't cost anything (if you have a half decent compiler), and you can easily use them again for the same thing. Without the firstTimeOnPage, I would be very likely to put in the if (data == null) condition somewhere else as well.
    – erikkallen
    May 19, 2009 at 9:59
  • 3
    You might spend 10 seconds reading a one-line comment and then 3 hours finding out that the comment is outdated and led you down the wrong path. A well named variable or method is preferable, then I know what your intentions were and know that it hasn't changed. Also easily refactorable.
    – rball
    Oct 19, 2009 at 15:48
  • 2
    @brian, one time variables can give names to faceless expressions, which is nice, especially in long parameter lists. Oct 23, 2009 at 18:15
21
votes

A Good Programmer Hates Coding

Similar to "A Good Programmer is a Lazy Programmer" and "Less Code is Better." But by following this philosophy, I have managed to write applications which might otherwise use several times as much code (and take several times as much development time). In short: think before you code. Most of the parts of my own programs which end up causing problems later were parts that I actually enjoyed coding, and thus had too much code, and thus were poorly written. Just like this paragraph.

A Good Programmer is a Designer

I've found that programming uses the same concepts as design (as in, the same design concepts used in art). I'm not sure most other programmers find the same thing to be true; maybe it is a right brain/left brain thing. Too many programs out there are ugly, from their code to their command line user interface to their graphical user interface, and it is clear that the designers of these programs were not, in fact, designers.

Although correlation may not, in this case, imply causation, I've noticed that as I've become better at design, I've become better at coding. The same process of making things fit and feel right can and should be used in both places. If code doesn't feel right, it will cause problems because either a) it is not right, or b) you'll assume it works in a way that "feels right" later, and it will then again be not right.

Art and code are not on opposite ends of the spectrum; code can be used in art, and can itself be a form of art.

Disclaimer: Not all of my code is pretty or "right," unfortunately.

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  • 1
    Definitely agree! Making beautiful applications requires beautiful code.
    – Matt
    Dec 19, 2009 at 9:31
  • 1
    Only just seen this: agreed 100%. Ugly code is far more likely to be buggy. An appreciation of elegance and beauty is essential to good coding. Apr 9, 2010 at 17:13
20
votes

I work in ASP.NET / VB.NET a lot and find ViewState an absolute nightmare. It's enabled by default on the majority of fields and causes a large quantity of encoded data at the start of every web page. The bigger a page gets in terms of controls on a page, the larger the ViewState data will become. Most people don't turn an eye to it, but it creates a large set of data which is usually irrelevant to the tasks being carried on the page. You must manually disable this option on all ASP controls if they're not being used. It's either that or have custom controls for everything.

On some pages I work with, half of the page is made up of ViewState, which is a shame really as there's probably better ways of doing it.

That's just one small example I can think of in terms of language/technology opinions. It may be controversial.

By the way, you might want to edit voting on this thread, it could get quite heated by some ;)

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  • Could you highlight your controversial opinion... is it "viewstate is bad" or something else?
    – Ed Guiness
    Jan 2, 2009 at 14:07
  • Nope, it's "ViewState is enabled by default, when I really don't think it should be, but having it disabled by default required custom controls" Jan 2, 2009 at 14:21
  • I expect anyone who has worked on ASP.NET would agree with this. We have a page to search a third party system that has some LARGE drop down lists on it. The ViewState doubled the already 200Kb page size.
    – pipTheGeek
    Jan 2, 2009 at 14:34
  • I don't think that experienced webforms developers will find this particularly controversial...most of us will agree with you! Jan 2, 2009 at 15:20
  • 2
    Try ASP.NET MVC, it's a joy to program with.
    – Dave
    Jan 13, 2009 at 23:59
20
votes

My controversial opinion: Object Oriented Programming is absolutely the worst thing that's ever happened to the field of software engineering.

The primary problem with OOP is the total lack of a rigorous definition that everyone can agree on. This easily leads to implementations that have logical holes in them, or language like Java that adhere to this bizarre religious dogma about what OOP means, while forcing the programmer into doing all these contortions and "design patterns" just to work around the limitations of a particular OOP system.

So, OOP tricks the programmer into thinking they're making these huge productivity gains, that OOP is somehow a "natural" way to think, while forcing the programmer to type boatloads of unnecessary boilerplate.

Then since nobody knows what OOP actually means, we get vast amounts of time wasted on petty arguments about whether language X or Y is "truly OOP" or not, what bizarre cargo cultish language features are absolutely "essential" for a language to be considered "truly OOP".

Instead of demanding that this language or that language be "truly oop", we should be looking at what language features are shown by experiment, to actually increase productivity, instead of trying to force it into being some imagined ideal language, or indeed forcing our programs to conform to some platonic ideal of a "truly object oriented program".

Instead of insisting that our programs conform to some platonic ideal of "Truly object oriented", how about we focus on adhering to good engineering principles, making our code easy to read and understand, and using the features of a language that are productive and helpful, regardless of whether they are "OOP" enough or not.

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  • It sounds like you're mixing programming methodologies and language design philosophies, while also recognizing the damage of zealotry. As a result, your potentially interesting thoughts are cluttered and unclear.
    – Jay Bazuzi
    Jan 3, 2009 at 17:35
  • 1
    Incorrect. There's nothing wrong with OOP, it's just a strategy. What the problem is, is the attitude that I should have "embraced" it, or the only alternative is I'm some backwards beginner. It is not the end all be all, it is not a religion, and I don't have to be crucified in order to expunge me from the pool of programmers so that all "right" thinking programmers can live free of sin. I posted my answer to this question because it is the most controversial opinion I have. That was the question.
    – Breton
    May 26, 2009 at 2:22
  • 1
    the reason it's the worst thing to happen to programming is that it prevents programmers from looking at other solutions that may actually be better suited to the problem, and it prevents us from looking ot or accepting new paradigms that might be better suited to most problems.
    – Breton
    May 26, 2009 at 2:25
  • 1
    I hate when newcomers lecture me about the greatness of OOP when I program in OO languages from mid '80s. They are totally blind to OOP shortcomings, they don't know that "OOP" is an ill-defined concept and, worst of all, they ignore a whole world of options w.r.t. programming paradigms.
    – MaD70
    Nov 6, 2009 at 0:55
  • 2
    +1 Wish I could upvote more. This field is rife with bandwagons, gurus, "right thinking", and occasionally good ideas made into religions. To a mechanical/electrical engineer (like me) this is so weird. I assume if something is true there's a scientific reason why. I also assume inventiveness is a good thing. Very little of that in this field. Feb 18, 2010 at 14:59
20
votes

Boolean variables should be used only for Boolean logic. In all other cases, use enumerations.


Boolean variables are used to store data that can only take on two possible values. The problems that arise from using them are frequently overlooked:

  • Programmers often cannot correctly identify when some piece of data should only have two possible values
  • The people who instruct programmers what to do, such as program managers or whomever writes the specs that programmers follow, often cannot correctly identify this either
  • Even when a piece of data is correctly identified as having only two possible states, that guarantee may not hold in the future.

In these cases, using Boolean variables leads to confusing code that can often be prevented by using enumerations.

Example

Say a programmer is writing software for a car dealership that sells only cars and trucks. The programmer develops a thorough model of the business requirements for his software. Knowing that the only types of vehicles sold are cars and trucks, he correctly identifies that he can use a boolean variable inside a Vehicle class to indicate whether the vehicle is a car or a truck.

class Vehicle {
 bool isTruck;
 ...
}

The software is written so when isTruck is true a vehicle is a truck, and when isTruck is false the vehicle is a car. This is a simple check performed many times throughout the code.

Everything works without trouble, until one day when the car dealership buys another dealership that sells motorcycles as well. The programmer has to update the software so that it works correctly considering the dealership's business has changed. It now needs to identify whether a vehicle is a car, truck, or motorcycle, three possible states.

How should the programmer implement this? isTruck is a boolean variable, so it can hold only two states. He could change it from a boolean to some other type that allows many states, but this would break existing logic and possibly not be backwards compatible. The simplest solution from the programmer's point of view is to add a new variable to represent whether the vehicle is a motorcycle.

class Vehicle {
 bool isTruck;
 bool isMotorcycle;
 ...
}

The code is changed so that when isTruck is true a vehicle is a truck, when isMotorcycle is true a vehicle is a motorcycle, and when they're both false a vehicle is a car.

Problems

There are two big problems with this solution:

  • The programmer wants to express the type of the vehicle, which is one idea, but the solution uses two variables to do so. Someone unfamiliar with the code will have a harder time understanding the semantics of these variables than if the programmer had used just one variable that specifies the type entirely.
  • Solving this motorcycle problem by adding a new boolean doesn't make it any easier for the programmer to deal with such situations that happen in the future. If the dealership starts selling buses, the programmer will have to repeat all these steps over again by adding yet another boolean.

It's not the developer's fault that the business requirements of his software changed, requiring him to revise existing code. But using boolean variables in the first place made his code less flexible and harder to modify to satisfy unknown future requirements (less "future-proof"). When he implemented the changes in the quickest way, the code became harder to read. Using a boolean variable was ultimately a premature optimization.

Solution

Using an enumeration in the first place would have prevented these problems.

enum EVehicleType { Truck, Car }

class Vehicle {
 EVehicleType type;
 ...
}

To accommodate motorcycles in this case, all the programmer has to do is add Motorcycle to EVehicleType, and add new logic to handle the motorcycle cases. No new variables need to be added. Existing logic shouldn't be disrupted. And someone who's unfamiliar with the code can easily understand how the type of the vehicle is stored.

Cliff Notes

Don't use a type that can only ever store two different states unless you're absolutely certain two states will always be enough. Use an enumeration if there are any possible conditions in which more than two states will be required in the future, even if a boolean would satisfy existing requirements.

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  • I guess this is not very controversial.
    – Ikke
    Nov 24, 2009 at 21:15
  • The argument isn't controversial per se, but try writing your code like that and see if your team object. I'd bet 9/10 teams would try and argue you back to booleans.
    – David
    Feb 19, 2010 at 3:18
  • 1
    Of course, OOP guys in the corner would mutter something along the lines of "class Truck extends/implements Vehicle, class Car extends/implements Vehicle..." Mar 12, 2010 at 10:09
  • 1
    I worked on a project that used a collection of booleans to try to distinguish among models of printer. It was ... execrable. Nobody would want to do that after having seen it in action. But here's some controversy for you: In languages which allow it, it's perfectly reasonable to use a bool for one of three values: true, false, and don't know. Mar 15, 2010 at 19:19
  • Thanks. Never thought about that. I guess I should give enums a better look.
    – Sylverdrag
    Jun 8, 2010 at 6:01
19
votes

You don't always need a database.

If you need to store less than a few thousand "things" and you don't need locking, flat files can work and are better in a lot of ways. They are more portable, and you can hand edit them in a pinch. If you have proper separation between your data and business logic, you can easily replace the flat files with a database if your app ever needs it. And if you design it with this in mind, it reminds you to have proper separation between your data and business logic.

--
bmb

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  • True, but Sqlite is very portable too. I'm not gonna start with flat files if there is a change it should be moved to Sqlite.
    – tuinstoel
    Jan 3, 2009 at 22:37
  • There are other benefits of a DB. Shared access across a network for a client/server program. Easy access and manipulation of data (although technologies like LINQ help with that). Jan 4, 2009 at 8:26
  • There are thousands of benefits of a database and reasons why we need them most of the time. But not always.
    – bmb
    Jan 4, 2009 at 15:58
  • 3
    I am 100% convinced that developers over use databases. The crutch that kills. Mar 30, 2009 at 11:40
  • 1
    @Stu Thompson, I'm not. At work I'm refactoring an application so that it stores its data in a database instead of xml files. It is a lot of work and I hope it is the last time that I have to do this.
    – tuinstoel
    Sep 25, 2009 at 9:40
19
votes

C (or C++) should be the first programming language

The first language should NOT be the easy one, it should be one that sets up the student's mind and prepare it for serious computer science.
C is perfect for that, it forces students to think about memory and all the low level stuff, and at the same time they can learn how to structure their code (it has functions!)

C++ has the added advantage that it really sucks :) thus the students will understand why people had to come up with Java and C#

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  • 1
    so everybody should suffer, because you have suffered? its always nice to learn useless things, but come on.
    – IAdapter
    Jan 3, 2009 at 4:00
  • Not really, I really loved C++ back in the day, I was in denial when I heard from a prof that it's the worst language he's ever seen.
    – hasen
    Jan 3, 2009 at 8:18
  • 9
    +1: Everyone should learn C first because programming isn't for everyone and it isn't for anyone that can't grasp C. Jan 5, 2009 at 4:38
  • Blast them with raw machine code. Suffer!!! The assembler course was the most fun in had (during class time) in university. Jan 29, 2009 at 9:40
  • Mythology. Before encountering C I learned the assembly of 2/3 CPUs and familiarized with others. Some CPUs are a pleasure to program because of their orthogonal instruction sets, others are a pain but less idiosyncratic than C. C fails for its intended use, i.e. a portable assembly.
    – MaD70
    Nov 5, 2009 at 23:05
17
votes

Here's one which has seemed obvious to me for many years but is anathema to everyone else: it is almost always a mistake to switch off C (or C++) assertions with NDEBUG in 'release' builds. (The sole exceptions are where the time or space penalty is unacceptable).

Rationale: If an assertion fails, your program has entered a state which

  • has never been tested
  • the developer was unable to code a recovery strategy for
  • the developer has effectively documented as being inconceivable.

Yet somehow 'industry best practice' is that the thing should just muddle on and hope for the best when it comes to live runs with your customers' data.

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  • "has never been tested" You do pre-release testing with assertions on and accept the assertion being triggered as passing the test? Weird idea. If you do that than I agree with you but I don't understand why you are doing this.
    – jwpfox
    Jan 3, 2009 at 13:24
  • No, I'm just assuming that a failed assertion during testing causes a build to be rejected. Therefore, if one happens in the wild, the program has necessarily entered a state outside of test coverage.
    – fizzer
    Jan 3, 2009 at 13:37
  • If during testing your assertions never failed and it does fail during production code, there is a problem with testing, but nevertheless, the error should be logged and the applications should end. Assertions or code that warrants the same should be in production. I agree. Jan 5, 2009 at 12:04
  • 1
    The problem is when the action of doing the assertion costs something that would otherwise slow down your code. If it is not in a hot path, I totally agree, the asserts should always be on.
    – nosatalian
    May 31, 2009 at 2:07
  • ++ I've followed this path, in the spirit of "hope for the best - plan for the worst". We test to the very best of our ability, but never assume we have found every possible problem. Assert (or throwing an exception) is a way of guarding against doing further damage if a problem occurs (heaven forbid). Mar 22, 2010 at 21:29
17
votes

All source code and comments should be written in English

Writing source code and/or comments in languages other than English makes it less reusable and more difficult to debug if you don't understand the language they are written in.

Same goes for SQL tables, views, and columns, especially when abbrevations are used. If they aren't abbreviated, I might be able to translate the table/column name on-line, but if they're abbreviated all I can do is SELECT and try to decipher the results.

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  • If English is the main language of wherever you work, I guess. Otherwise, that's just stupid. This suggestion seems pointless imo. Jul 4, 2009 at 22:10
  • Especially when you code ABAP in SAP-Systems it's always funny to read some German comments, that nobody out of German speaking regions will ever understand. (I'm a native German speaker so it's double funny)
    – capfu
    Jul 23, 2009 at 0:52
  • 3
    All comments in English is great - if you speak English, and the maintainers will as well. I am a native English speaker, but ocassionally plop other languages in just because I can. If I were coding for an app that would be used and eventually maintained in, say, France - I'd expect the comments to be in French
    – warren
    Oct 22, 2009 at 3:57
  • Using multiple languages in code makes it harder to read as you have to switch between the two languages in your head. English only (with native terms if needed in parenthesis). Oct 23, 2009 at 19:46
  • That's not controversial, is simply idiotic when you know that a piece of code will never leave a non English-speaking country. I know perfectly that my English sucks and I don't want to inflict it on my fellow countryman programmers. Of course, if I'm quoting documentation in English I don't translate it.
    – MaD70
    Nov 6, 2009 at 0:00
16
votes

Only write an abstraction if it's going to save 3X as much time later.

I see people write all these crazy abstractions sometimes and I think to myself, "Why?"

Unless an abstraction is really going to save you time later or it's going to save the person maintaining your code time, it seems people are just writing spaghetti code more and more.

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  • 5
    If you're writing abstraction using spaghetti code, then you're doing something very, very, wrong.
    – JesperE
    Feb 27, 2009 at 20:01
16
votes

The word 'evil' is an abused and overused word on Stackoverflow and simular forums.

People who use it have too little imagination.

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  • 9
    I think this is an evil opinion by an evil man out to do evil. Jan 26, 2009 at 10:43
  • 4
    In other words: 'evil' is evil. Dec 21, 2009 at 17:31
  • "People who use it have too little imagination." ..and are evil. :)
    – mlvljr
    Apr 2, 2010 at 9:11
16
votes

Newer languages, and managed code do not make a bad programmer better.

1
  • Agree. New running shoes won't make the average runner run any faster. Jan 26, 2009 at 10:09
15
votes

Classes should fit on the screen.

If you have to use the scroll bar to see all of your class, your class is too big.

Code folding and miniature fonts are cheating.

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  • 4
    You must have a really large screen then. Do you also think, that class can have no more than 3 or 4 methods, because no more clearly fits on the 41 lines that fit on my screen. Voting up, because this is really controversial. Jan 3, 2009 at 19:40
  • 1
    I have to disagree as well. I write a lot of Python classes and not many of them fit on my screen. Of course, I'm not counting my netbook's screen because that would just be unfair to me. =P
    – user13876
    Jan 5, 2009 at 11:12
  • 9
    For some of my classes, I can barely fit the member list on the screen. If an obect is to represent something, it should do so in its entirety. Breaking it up into many smaller classes is just adding visual complexity (right click > go to definition - ad nauseum) where it need not exist. Jan 23, 2009 at 22:31
  • 1
    I think this is baiting. The implication is that a class should have a limit to the number of attributes it can have because their declaration eats into the space for method bodies. This sounds like a language troll as in, any language that can't fit a class onto one screen isn't fit to use. Try coding something complex like the contact details for a person which includes an international address including phone numbers, email, fax, etc. Jul 16, 2009 at 15:37
  • 1
    Not if you're programming for a mobile phone. Dec 21, 2009 at 17:28
15
votes

The best code is often the code you don't write. As programmers we want to solve every problem by writing some cool method. Anytime we can solve a problem and still give the users 80% of what they want without introducing more code to maintain and test we have provided waaaay more value.

2
  • It reminds me of a quote (I can't remember who said it though) - "Measuring a program by lines of code is like measuring a plane by weight." Jan 3, 2009 at 15:48
  • @Cristián: It was Bill Gates who said that.
    – Dan Dyer
    Jan 11, 2009 at 13:43
15
votes

I really dislike when people tell me to use getters and setters instead of making the variable public when you should be able to both get and set the class variable.

I totally agree on it if it's to change a variable in an object in your object, so you don't get things like: a.b.c.d.e = something; but I would rather use: a.x = something; then a.setX(something); I think a.x = something; actually are both easier to read, and prettier then set/get in the same example.

I don't see the reason by making:

void setX(T x) { this->x = x; }

T getX() { return x; }

which is more code, more time when you do it over and over again, and just makes the code harder to read.

19
  • Agreed. Getters and setters violate encapsulation just as much as exposing objects directly does. There is no real point to them (except maybe in an external interface).
    – Ferruccio
    Jan 2, 2009 at 13:37
  • 13
    There's actually a good reason to use setters: You can do some checking on constraints before assigning the new value to your variable. Even if your current code doesn't require it, it will be much easier to add such checks when there's a setter.
    – Jorn
    Jan 2, 2009 at 13:43
  • 3
    I was very glad there was a setter on a variable once when I had to make sure some processing was done when it changed. Jan 2, 2009 at 14:51
  • 1
    Actually, I think Ruby has something that gets you both - it's called virtual attributes. It allows you to have checks on your assignments and still be able to access the data as if it were a public member. Jan 3, 2009 at 15:35
  • 4
    And you set a breakpoint on a public field how, exactly? Setters are brilliant for exactly this reason - you can easily see what code is influencing a value.
    – Mark
    Jul 7, 2009 at 13:52
15
votes

I generally hold pretty controversial, strong and loud opinions, so here's just a couple of them:

"Because we're a Microsoft outfit/partner/specialist" is never a valid argument.

The company I'm working in now identifies itself, first and foremost, as a Microsoft specialist. So the aforementioned argument gets thrown around quite a bit, and I've yet to see a context where it's valid.

I can't see why it's a reason to promote Microsoft's technology and products in every applicable corner, overriding customer and employee satisfaction, and general pragmatics.

This just a cornerstone of my deep hatred towards politics in software business.

MOSS (Microsoft Office Sharepoint Server) is a piece of shit.

Kinda echoes the first opinion, but I honestly think MOSS, as it is, should be shot out of the market. It costs gazillions to license and set up, pukes on web standards and makes developers generally pretty unhappy. I have yet to see a MOSS project that has an overall positive outcome.

Yet time after time, a customer approaches us and asks for a MOSS solution.

3
  • MOSS = Microsoft Office SharePoint Server ?
    – tuinstoel
    Aug 2, 2009 at 13:01
  • As someone who occasionally has to program for Sharepoint, I will state that you second opinion is not controversial at all. Nov 18, 2009 at 20:36
  • I agree 250% with everything. Keep speaking your mind. Lots of people see things this way!
    – JL.
    Mar 23, 2010 at 4:24
14
votes

A Developer should never test their own software

Development and testing are two diametrically opposed disciplines. Development is all about construction, and testing is all about demolition. Effective testing requires a specific mindset and approach where you are trying to uncover developer mistakes, find holes in their assumptions, and flaws in their logic. Most people, myself included, are simply unable to place themselves and their own code under such scrutiny and still remain objective.

3
  • 2
    Do you include unit testing in that? Do you not see any value in unit testing? If so, I don't agree. I would agree that a developer shouldn't be the only tester of their software (where possible, of course).
    – Jon Skeet
    May 29, 2009 at 6:12
  • 6
    Jon, I am talking from the point of view that yes they SHOULD do unit testing but no they should NOT be the only tester of their code. As you rightly point out, if they are the only one then they don't have much choice. This question did ask for your most controversial opinion so I think that mine is right up there. The other key point is that the "we don't need no stinking testers" cause' the dev's or anyone can just do it is completely wrong as well May 29, 2009 at 13:44
  • I suggest you reword the rule to "should never be RESPONSIBLE for testing their own software", as your current wording could imply you were not allowed to test your pgorams at all. Oct 23, 2009 at 18:17
13
votes

Developers are all different, and should be treated as such.

Developers don't fit into a box, and shouldn't be treated as such. The best language or tool for solving a problem has just as much to do with the developers as it does with the details of the problem being solved.

1
  • And therefore the bozo bit must be flipped for some :-D
    – icelava
    Jan 7, 2009 at 13:32
13
votes

New web projects should consider not using Java.

I've been using Java to do web development for over 10 years now. At first, it was a step in the right direction compared to the available alternatives. Now, there are better alternatives than Java.

This is really just a specific case of the magic hammer approach to problem solving, but it's one that's really painful.

4
  • 2
    Did you mean "New web projects should not consider" ?
    – dreftymac
    Jan 4, 2009 at 4:46
  • That doesn't sound very controversial to me.
    – finnw
    Jan 17, 2009 at 18:09
  • WOW! Some people in this thread really have extremist views! ;-) Jan 26, 2009 at 10:44
  • This is absolutely not controversial. Perhaps you want to say New web projects should not consider using Java
    – flybywire
    Nov 10, 2009 at 12:24
13
votes

I have a few... there's exceptions to everything so these are not hard and fast but they do apply in most cases

Nobody cares if your website validates, is XHTML strict, is standards-compliant, or has a W3C badge.

It may earn you some high-fives from fellow Web developers, but the rest of people looking at your site could give a crap whether you've validated your code or not. the vast majority of Web surfers are using IE or Firefox, and since both of those browsers are forgiving of nonstandards, nonstrict, invalidated HTML then you really dont need to worry about it. If you've built a site for a car dealer, a mechanic, a radio station, a church, or a local small business, how many people in any of those businesses' target demographics do you think care about valid HTML? I'd hazard a guess it's pretty close to 0.

Most open-source software is useless, overcomplicated crap.

Let me install this nice piece of OSS I've found. It looks like it should do exactly what I want! Oh wait, first I have to install this other window manager thingy. OK. Then i need to get this command-line tool and add it to my path. Now I need the latest runtimes for X, Y, and Z. now i need to make sure i have these processes running. ok, great... its all configured. Now let me learn a whole new set of commands to use it. Oh cool, someone built a GUI for it. I guess I don't need to learn these commands. Wait, I need this library on here to get the GUI to work. Gotta download that now. ok, now its working...crap, I can't figure out this terrible UI.

sound familiar? OSS is full of complication for complication's sake, tricky installs that you need to be an expert to perform, and tools that most people wouldn't know what to do with anyway. So many projects fall by the wayside, others are so niche that very few people would use them, and some of the decent ones (FlowPlayer, OSCommerce, etc) have such ridiculously overcomplicated and bloated source code that it defeats the purpose of being able to edit the source. You can edit the source... if you can figure out which of the 400 files contains the code that needs modification. You're really in trouble when you learn that its all 400 of them.

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  • I wish I could vote to make you God. Really, this is amazing stuff. Jan 15, 2009 at 7:54
  • 1
    On the other hand the best OSS packages are huge force multipliers. These are the well-designed, well-maintained ones that have big communities of users and developers (and real published books). Some examples of these are Rhino (Javascript interpreter), Xerces (XML Parser), Restlet (REST Web Services), and jQuery (Javascript GUI development). Others really do suck, like Axis 1.x. May 19, 2009 at 2:34
  • Screen readers and other accessibility tools perform better if the HTML conforms to standards. As for OSS .. your reasoning is deeply flawed in applying your own negative experience to all OSS works. Sure modifying OSS projects can be difficult (impossible for many) but I've lost count of the OSS libraries I've used to save myself tons of work on various projects. If most OSS is useless it is only because there is so much of it. There is a lot of very useful OSS out there.
    – Kris
    May 31, 2009 at 0:17
  • Everything WWW sucks anyway, so for the first point I cannot care less. +100 for the second.
    – MaD70
    Nov 5, 2009 at 23:41
  • 3
    long live the sudo apt-get install
    – hasen
    Nov 6, 2009 at 6:22
13
votes

Programming is in its infancy.

Even though programming languages and methodologies have been evolving very quickly for years now, we still have a long way to go. The signs are clear:

  1. Language Documentation is spread haphazardly across the internet (stackoverflow is helping here).

  2. Languages cannot evolve syntactically without breaking prior versions.

  3. Debugging is still often done with printf.

  4. Language libraries or other forms of large scale code reuse are still pretty rare.

Clearly all of these are improving, but it would be nice if we all could agree that this is the beginning and not the end=).

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    I have upvoted it although I believe this is completely uncontroversial to anyone who knows a minimum about programming methodology and history. We've got a long road ahead, hence the many insulting jokes about programmers’ abilities compared to architects, airplane pilots etc. Apr 11, 2009 at 20:18
  • 1
    Actual there are many who would say the opposite. Everything interesting to do with programming languages was done in 60s with Lisp. We are just waiting for people to figure this out - Witness the growing popularity of Python/Java closures, etc. So this is controversial.
    – nosatalian
    May 31, 2009 at 2:37
  • printf debugging is actually mentioned on a higher-rated comment in this thread as being a good idea
    – OJW
    Dec 6, 2009 at 22:10
13
votes

If you want to write good software then step away from your computer

Go and hang out with the end users and the people who want and need the software. Only from them will you understand what your software needs to accomplish and how it needs to do that.

  • Ask them what the love & hate about the existing processes.
  • Ask them about the future of their processes, where it is headed.
  • Hang out and see what they use now and figure out their usage patterns. You need to meet and match their usage expectations. See what else they use a lot, particularly if they like it and can use it efficiently. Match that.

The end user doesn't give a rat's how elegant your code is or what language it's in. If it works for them and they like using it, you win. If it doesn't make their lives easier and better - they hate it, you lose.

Walk a mile in their shoes - then go write your code.

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  • Great answer - I always try to do this... but sometimes you got to protect users from their own ideas. Because e.g. in business software (financial) I always encounter some users with the tendency to wish for "creative bookkeeping". Hehe.
    – capfu
    Jul 23, 2009 at 0:58
  • This is why I love being a domain expert. For my whole career I've worked alongside people who use the type of software I write. Oct 17, 2009 at 17:42
  • @Jeanne: Ditto - my major project is based on what I do for a living. I do a lot of talking to myself.
    – CAD bloke
    Oct 18, 2009 at 10:40
13
votes

Object Oriented Programming is overused

Sometimes the best answer is the simple answer.

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  • For most competent worldly-wise OO devs, classes are only broken out from a root class once it becomes apparent that complexity is becoming hard to manage. Oddly (or not so oddly), it is often at that very point that it becomes apparent just what needs to be broken out. And until you do break out from a root class, you are programming procedurally (at least within the context of that class). Premature proliferation of classes during the development process is something that OO greenhorns do.
    – Engineer
    Sep 17, 2010 at 15:38
13
votes

Stay away from Celko!!!!

http://www.dbdebunk.com/page/page/857309.htm

I think it makes a lot more sense to use surrogate primary keys then "natural" primary keys.


@ocdecio: Fabian Pascal gives (in chapter 3 of his book Practical issues in database management, cited in point 3 at the page that you link) as one of the criteria for choosing a key that of stability (it always exists and doesn't change). When a natural key does not possesses such property, than a surrogate key must be used, for evident reasons, to which you hint in comments.

You don't know what he wrote and you have not bothered to check, otherwise you could discover that you actually agree with him. Nothing controversial there: he was saying "don't be dogmatic, adapt general guidelines to circumstances, and, above all, think, use your brain instead of a dogmatic/cookbook/words-of-guru approach".

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  • Yes! His ideas about Heiarchical data structures are academically elegant and totally useless. Jan 2, 2009 at 14:28
  • Well, I like Celko but I agree with you re: surrogate primary keys! Jan 2, 2009 at 15:19
  • Agree in part, surrogate keys are definitely more convenient when accessing data, but I try to identify a natural key as well and usually set it up as a constraint. So why not both?!
    – tekiegreg
    Jan 3, 2009 at 16:34
  • I have no problems with natural keys to be used for convenience, but primary keys should be immutable. I once had a system that used SSN's as PK's, and sometimes persons wouldn't have one (as children) and then they would. Try to change a PK, what a mess... Jan 3, 2009 at 16:56
  • I can agree with the concept that once your autonumber keys get mismatched, there's no way to fix them. But the solution isn't "natural" keys; the solution is never to expose the keys to your users.
    – Ryan Lundy
    Jan 4, 2009 at 3:21
12
votes

Every developer should spend several weeks, or even months, developing paper-based systems before they start building electronic ones. They should also then be forced to use their systems.

Developing a good paper-based system is hard work. It forces you to take into account human nature (cumbersome processes get ignored, ones that are too complex tend to break down), and teaches you to appreciate the value of simplicity (new work goes in this tray, work for QA goes in this tray, archiving goes in this box).

Once you've worked out how to build a system on paper, it's often a lot easier to build an effective computer system - one that people will actually want to (and be able to) use.

The systems we develop are not manned by an army of perfectly-trained automata; real people use them, real people who are trained by managers who are also real people and have far too little time to waste training them how to jump through your hoops.

In fact, for my second point:

Every developer should be required to run an interactive training course to show users how to use their software.

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  • 1
    Programming has a lot in common with cleaning your room. The same principles of organization apply. Jan 4, 2009 at 20:11
  • Maybe... rather than dealing with your accounts as bits of paper you abstract them into folders, and encapsulate them in a filing cabinet or box. If you find a way to unit test laundry, let me know! Jan 6, 2009 at 14:12
  • Generally having a plan before building a web site/ desktop app/ house/ nuclear sub is always a good idea! Mapping things out, either with a sketches on a pad of paper, a wireframe, visio, work flow, mind map, whatever. And the training users...I see this missed by even the most brillant programmers. User acceptance in the long run determins your apps success. If they don't understand it, no matter what it does or how well it is done, your app will fail.
    – infocyde
    Jun 25, 2009 at 21:46
12
votes

Most consulting programmers suck and should not be allowed to write production code.

IMHO-Probably about 60% or more

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  • That is not controversial; that is fact!
    – icelava
    Jan 7, 2009 at 13:31
  • 2
    Most non-consulting programmers are stuck in a rut and live in a company bubble maintaining dinosaur code while never being exposed to anything that challenges there assumptions; except for the occasional outside consultant. How's that for controversial? ;-) Jan 26, 2009 at 10:37
  • 2
    @Diego; true and consultants have an opportunity to become amazing programmers with everything they are exposed to. But in my experience, I've seen too much crap written by hacks who just picked up enough knowledge to make it work, knowing they'd never have to maintain it, and they just don't care. Jan 26, 2009 at 18:11
  • 1
    I consulted for many years. There were cases where the company programmers were good but didn't understand how I was doing things, and so were inclined to criticize. Nevertheless, I'm inclined to agree with you - there are half-hearted programmers in contracting positions. Mar 8, 2010 at 14:10
12
votes

Non-development staff should not be allowed to manage development staff.

Correction: Staff with zero development experience should not be allowed to manage development staff.

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  • 2
    Better non-development staff with management skills than developer staff without management skills.
    – tuinstoel
    Jan 5, 2009 at 15:44
  • So you reckon every company that employs any developers should have a developer as CEO?
    – finnw
    Jan 17, 2009 at 18:10
  • Yes, if you going to manage people with a special skill set it would be helpful if you also had a background in that skill set. Would you hire a CEO with no Management experience?
    – Chris
    Jan 22, 2009 at 17:24
  • 3
    C-level comparisons are weak. More realistic would be "Would you hire an untrained mechanic to manage mechanics?" Well...yes. I'm not saying that non-developers make better managers of developers, or that management & development abilities are mutually exclusive, but rather the ability to manage an employee is significantly more important to the ability to do the employee's work. Apr 28, 2009 at 20:25
12
votes

Most Programmers are Useless at Programming

(You did say 'controversial')

I was sat in my office at home pondering some programming problem and I ended up looking at my copy of 'Complete Spectrum ROM Disassembly' on my bookshelf and thinking:

"How many programmers today could write the code used in the Spectrum's ROM?"

The Spectrum, for those unfamiliar with it, had a Basic programming language that could do simple 2D graphics (lines, curves), file IO of a sort and floating point calculations including transendental functions all in 16K of Z80 code (a < 5Mhz 8bit processor that had no FPU or integer multiply). Most graduates today would have trouble writing a 'Hello World' program that was that small.

I think the problem is that the absolute number of programmers that could do that has hardly changed but as a percentage it is quickly approaching zero. Which means that the quality of code being written is decreasing as more sub-par programmers enter the field.

Where I'm currently working, there are seven programmers including myself. Of these, I'm the only one who keeps up-to-date by reading blogs, books, this site, etc and doing programming 'for fun' at home (my wife is constantly amazed by this). There's one other programmer who is keen to write well structured code (interestingly, he did a lot of work using Delphi) and to refactor poor code. The rest are, well, not great. Thnking about it, you could describe them as 'brute force' programmers - will force inappropriate solutions until they work after a fashion (e.g. using C# arrays with repeated array.Resize to dynamically add items instead of using a List).

Now, I don't know if the place I'm currently at is typical, although from my previous positions I would say it is. With the benefit of hindsight, I can see common patterns that certainly didn't help any of the projects (lack of peer review of code for one).

So, 5 out of 7 programmers are rubbish.

Skizz

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  • 1
    There are fewer programmers with the skillset to tackle a problem that no longer matters. Now we have higher levels of abstraction that allow the big picture to come together in more loosely coupled, highly OO ways. Its not that I'm not smart enough to write it, its that I can write something better
    – Steve
    Mar 13, 2009 at 4:48
  • 1
    BIOS's and hardware drivers probably feature a lot of assembler. Many embedded systems are assembler only (or primitive C compilers if you're lucky). Even with high level OO, how many coders could write the equivalent of a Spectrum basic interpreter.
    – Skizz
    Mar 13, 2009 at 9:35
12
votes

A programming task is only fun while it's impossible, that is up til the point where you've convinced yourself you'll be able to solve it successfully.

This, I suppose, is why so many of my projects end up halfway finished in a folder called "to_be_continued".

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