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Modern Programming: Object Oriented Programming and Best Practices

You're reading from   Modern Programming: Object Oriented Programming and Best Practices Deconstruct object-oriented programming and use it with other programming paradigms to build applications

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838986186
Length 266 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Graham Lee Graham Lee
Author Profile Icon Graham Lee
Graham Lee
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Toc

Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

About the Book 1. Part One – OOP The Easy Way FREE CHAPTER
2. Antithesis 3. Thesis 4. Synthesis 5. Part Two – APPropriate Behavior
6. Tools That Support Software Development 7. Coding Practices 8. Testing 9. Architecture 10. Documentation 11. Requirements Engineering 12. Learning 13. Critical Analysis 14. Business 15. Teamwork 16. Ethics 17. Philosophy

Finding a Method to Run

Don't go out of your way to justify stuff that's obviously cool. Don't ridicule ideas merely because they're not the latest and greatest. Pick your own fashions. Don't let someone else tell you what you should like.

Larry Wall, (Perl, the first postmodern computer language—https://www.perl.com/pub/1999/03/pm.html/)

The Perl community has a mantra: TIMTOWTDI (pronounced "Tim Toady"). It stands for "There Is More Than One Way to Do It" and reflects the design principle that the language should enable its users to write programs in the way in which they are thinking and not in the way that the language designer thought about it. Of course, TIMTOWTDI is not the only way to do it, and the Zen of Pythonhttp://wiki.c2.com/?PythonPhilosophy takes a different (though not incompatible) tack:

There should be one-- and preferably only one --obvious way to do it.

So, how is a method found? There is more than one way to do...

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