First, feel free to close this if it's not appropriate, as this is my first time on Stackoverflow.
Perhaps my question is similiar in nature to this one -
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/11586/do-you-use-design-patterns
The programs that I write are small 50-75k line programs mostly using WinForms and ASP.NET. These programs are GUI intensive allowing the design and layout of various graphics and graphics processing.
I consider myself good at OOP and practiced at balancing OOP and traditional procedural methods to create maintainable code.
The problem comes in when I consider design patterns. The linked to thread has an interesting comment that design patterns may be used but not intentionally. When I want to intentionally use a design pattern (in the design of my program), it feels like I'm going above and beyond what is needed, that I'm in the realm of "architecture astronaut" so I fall back to my traditional methods and everything goes along smoothly (i.e. normally).
Take the MVC pattern as an example. If I want to implement this pattern using WinForms or ASP.NET (VS 2005) then I have to write a "Framework" and writing frameworks seems to be more trouble than it's worth for the size of the application.
Perhaps my applications are too small to justify the use of some of these patterns. Perhaps I just don't know the patterns well enough or need to study them more.
Does anyone else experience this "architecture astronaut" feeling? How do you go about intentionally using design patterns without going "overboard?"
