23
votes

I want to ask you to provide me with some articles (maybe books), which you possibly have found very convincing criticising the OOP methodology.

I have read some in the WWW on this topic and I didn't really find a 'definitive demotivator'.

It's not much about my personal attitude to the OOP, but I really would like to have something constructive, rigorous foundation for any kind of discussion and just abstract thinking.


You can post some original research too, but please be very constructive (as my personal request).

3
  • 1
    SICP's section on 'modularity and state' currently is the top of my search.
    – Bubba88
    Mar 9, 2010 at 14:00
  • Uh, forgot to make it community wiki. So please take part:)
    – Bubba88
    Mar 9, 2010 at 14:01
  • Don't know if this is any help but a general critism I have come across is that purely OOP programming languages define objects for modules of the program that aren't realy object (ie they're processes or interface functions or something that could be better defined in a procedural way).
    – user965369
    Nov 8, 2011 at 11:25

11 Answers 11

20
votes

Which version of OOP? Alan Kay's original vision? The bastardized modern form of it that misses the point entirely and thus encumbers us with bizarre access control, member variables, etc? Inheritance-centric? Prototype-based? Compositional OOP?

Each form of OOP has its strengths and its weaknesses; its advocates and its detractors; its domains of utility and its domains of uselessness. There's nothing magical about OOP that makes it the Killer Paradigm and there's nothing infernal about it that makes it the Killer (of Programmers) Paradigm.

I can't really point you to any books or articles that killed my interest in OOP as a Silver Bullet (as opposed to one of many techniques I can use to keep my projects survivable). I can point to the funniest critique of a specific brand of OOP, however: Steve Yegge's classic "Execution in the Kingdom of Nouns".

14
  • 1
    But it's only an answer to a specific brand of OOP of dozens. ;) Mar 9, 2010 at 14:18
  • 2
    Countering your counter of my counter-question (my brain hurts!): they are not. Alan Kay's original vision of OOP was independent software agents who communicated with each other via messages. There was no "public this, private that, protected the other" because EVERYTHING you did outside of your own class was a message call including accessing "member variables", etc. Inheritance was a minor implementation detail. In many ways languages like Erlang are more Kay-style OOP than modern OOP languages are. Mar 9, 2010 at 14:20
  • 3
    As I understand it, the core of Kay's concept is that objects hold data internally and communicate via messages. Accessable fields and methods with specific signatures are implementation details of how to implement the handling of such messages - very convenient to handle most cases, but elevating these implementation details to core abstractions weakens the concept. Mar 9, 2010 at 14:47
  • 4
    @Bubba88: Carl Hewitt, who invented the Actor Model, based it on Smalltalk-71. Alan Kay, who invented Smalltalk-71 based it on PLANNER, which in turn was also invented by Carl Hewitt. The designers of Erlang didn't actually know about the Actor Model (Joe Armstrong only learned about it many years later, when he was writing his thesis about the design of Erlang), they based the design of Erlang on Prolog, which in turn is based on - surprise - Carl Hewitt's PLANNER. So, your hunch is right: the similarities are very profound and deep and certainly not coincidence. Mar 10, 2010 at 1:49
  • 5
    @Bubba88: The designers of Erlang also based their design on the requirements of the telco industry: resiliency, dependability, no single point of failure, evolvability. Incidentally, those are also the attributes of an evolutionary successful organism, and guess what: Alan Kay actually has a degree in microbiology and based the design of Smalltalk on the way cells communicate with each other and form complex organisms from very simple structures. Again, no surprise there. Mar 10, 2010 at 1:54
12
votes

Rick Hickey's Are We There Yet ? - A Deconstruction of Object Oriented Time was an eye opener for me. It's the most logical OO criticism I have come across.

3
  • 3
    +1 for mention of Rick Hickey. I love him too :)
    – Bubba88
    Mar 9, 2010 at 14:46
  • 1
    Look at Clojure then, Bubba88. ;) Mar 9, 2010 at 15:10
  • Unable to view it... Disabled NoScript, disabled Flashblock. No avail...
    – Calmarius
    Mar 2, 2013 at 10:51
9
votes

If you want a criticism of OO programming, here's what I'd recommend:

  1. Learn Smalltalk
  2. Learn Erlang
  3. Learn Scheme

Once you've done that, you will have plenty of criticism of the common interpretation of OO programming.

(Hint: OO was in many ways intended to more closely resemble the Actor model of computation, but the common interpretation of it is effectively a modification of the procedural/structured model)

1
  • 2
    aka "spend more time than you were intending to on this problem" :) May 13, 2013 at 1:32
4
votes

Problem is - most people don't really know Object-Oriented Programming, so many designs SUCK.

Read the works of Scott Ambler, including his (now pretty old) Building Object Applications That Work. This has been eye-opening for quite a lot of people.

3
votes

Maybe not quite what you were looking for but have a look at the Jan/Feb issue of IEEE Software magazine: Object-Oriented Analysis: Is It Just Theory?. The basic conclusion is that OOA does not provide a good cost/benefit ratio so is poorly utilized.

Given that OOA is not effectively utililzed or supported in the "real world", I suspect that for larger development projects the overall system architecture, deployed object model and class hiearchy end up being sub-optimal and poorly understood (implemented) by various parts of the development team. A second article in the same journal: Four Trends Leading to Java Runtime Bloat point to some common OOP issues that detract from deploying high-volume Java (OOP) systems. The observations made in this article probably apply to most highly architected OOP applications.

Do not take this as OO bashing, it just reflects that as software practictioners we have quite a bit of work to do toward developing better person-to-person communication mechanisms to convey highly complex and abstracted process models.

0
2
votes

When you define a process in natural language. You use sentences where you define the subject who will do an action on one or more objects.

The only fix point is the action, the predicate of the sentence.

I don't think assigning actions to objects is a good idea. There is only one verb, but can be multiple nouns.

In OOP you can write a file in at least 3 ways:

file.write(data);

or

data.writeToFile(file);

or

OperatingSystem.write(file, data);

Which object should implement the method? You need to think about this too. While in the procedural way, you probably write

write(file, data);

And the only thing you need to think is the order of the operands which is usally does not matter.

(Well file and data may not be the best example but you probably see the point)

1
  • +1. This is a very valid point. Which argument should "take a responsibility" used to be a big question when I am programming in an "OO" way. Jul 27, 2012 at 0:21
2
votes

You should really see Mr. B. Jacobs's:

OOP Myths Debunked

(also known as OOP Oversold.)

6
  • Uh, I actually saw it before:)
    – Bubba88
    Mar 9, 2010 at 14:06
  • 2
    Wow, is it just me, or is that article rather heavily biased?
    – Andy E
    Mar 9, 2010 at 14:12
  • 6
    I'm sorry, but I can't take a programming opinion site seriously when it is STILL hosted in Geocities. Mar 9, 2010 at 14:13
  • 1
    What a very strange article - it's occasionally clownish ("Why OOP Reminds me of Communism"), and spends a bit too much time shadowboxing (does anyone think "OOP makes programming more visual"? Whatever that might mean), but it's also smart at times - the author is quite good about the hazards of inheritance for example. Mar 9, 2010 at 14:51
  • 1
    He has a few good points that he beats into the ground with hyperbolic rhetoric. There are good (but far from decisive) arguments buried in there somewhere, but the Signal/Noise is far too low for most of it to be helpful. Too many straw men, too much hyperbole.
    – Dave Sims
    Nov 9, 2010 at 1:44
2
votes

http://cat-v.org has a great page on Object Oriented Programming.

Most of the page consists of humorous but not terribly informative quotes. However, at the bottom of the page are a number of links to articles challenging OOP. They are:

If you are interested in alternatives to Object-Oriented Programming:

  • cat-v.org. From their 'about' page: Cat-v.org hosts a series of sites dedicated to diverse subjects that share an idiosyncratic intellectual perspective, questioning orthodoxy and fomenting elitism and high standards in topics from software design to politics, passing by art and journalism and anything else interesting.

  • Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs. Specifically teaches functional programming. Available free online here, for sale here. I cannot recommend this highly enough. It is absolutely revolutionary. It will change the way you think.

  • Any and all writings/videos/lectures by Rob Pike and Steve Yegge. Of particular interest is Yegge's Whirlwind Languages Tour.

1
  • I know this is terribly late, but I am interested in dispelling the myth of OOP as the ultimate and only way to program, so here's my 2¢. Also, I saw your comment about the SICP :). I included it anyway for completeness.
    – rob05c
    Jun 9, 2013 at 4:50
1
vote

I'd recommend learning a different programming paradigm or reading pro arguments for specific paradigms (http://www.info.ucl.ac.be/~pvr/VanRoyChapter.pdf). Besides OOP, I think the most widely used is the functional paradigm (search f.e. "Why functional programming matters"), but also have a look at the other ones. When you start looking at programming from a different perspective, the flaws of OOP start to appear automatically.

Simple exercise: define the objects IPerson, CMale and CFemale and implement the methods "sex" and "reproduce".

0
votes

hows about steve yegge's execution in the kingdom of the noun for java style OO

2
-1
votes

The Gideon Bible of object-oriented design patterns, aptly named Design Patterns. One of the best software design books I've ever read.

3
  • Thx.. but I've asked about criticism :)
    – Bubba88
    Mar 9, 2010 at 14:28
  • 4
    When you read the design patterns and see how badly they get abused, that becomes criticism. :D That and the "Flyweight" as implemented in the edition I read confuses the Hell out of me seeing as the "lightweight" replacement object takes more resources (execution and memory both!) than what it was replacing! Mar 9, 2010 at 14:40
  • 1
    It's hard to understand the GoF book without knowing some Smalltalk. Example: In Smalltalk, "true" is not a value. It is an object. Specifically, it is a Singleton instance of an object (I believe of type Boolean). It could also arguably be considered a Flyweight. So, val := true does not equate to val = true; in something like C# or Java - it's closer to val = True.Instance;.
    – kyoryu
    Mar 14, 2010 at 8:48

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