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Modular Programming with Python

You're reading from   Modular Programming with Python Introducing modular techniques for building sophisticated programs using Python

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2016
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781785884481
Length 246 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Erik Westra Erik Westra
Author Profile Icon Erik Westra
Erik Westra
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Table of Contents (11) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introducing Modular Programming 2. Writing Your First Modular Program FREE CHAPTER 3. Using Modules and Packages 4. Using Modules for Real-World Programming 5. Working with Module Patterns 6. Creating Reusable Modules 7. Advanced Module Techniques 8. Testing and Deploying Modules 9. Modular Programming as a Foundation for Good Programming Technique Index

Programming as a process

Imagine that you are writing a program to calculate the price of overseas purchases. Your company is based in England, and you need to calculate the local price of something purchased in US dollars. Someone else has already written a Python module which downloads the exchange rate, so your program starts out looking something like the following:

def calc_local_price(us_dollar_amount):
    exchange_rate = get_exchange_rate("USD", "EUR")
    local_amount = us_dollar_amount * exchange_rate
    return local_amount

So far so good. Your program is included in your company's online ordering system and the code goes into production. However, two months later, your company starts ordering products not just from the US, but from China, Germany, and Australia as well. You scramble to update your program to support these alternative currencies, and write something like the following:

def calc_local_price(foreign_amount, from_country):
    if from_country == "United States":
        exchange_rate = get_exchange_rate("USD", "EUR")
    elif from_country == "China":
        exchange_rate = get_exchange_rate("CHN", "EUR")
    elif from_country == "Germany":
        exchange_rate = get_exchange_rate("EUR", "EUR")
    elif from_country = "Australia":
        exchange_rate = get_exchange_rate("AUS", "EUR")
    else:
        raise RuntimeError("Unsupported country: " + from_country)
    local_amount = us_dollar_amount * exchange_rate
    return local_amount

Once again, this program goes into production. Six months later, another 14 countries are added, and the project manager also decides to add a new feature, where the user can see how the price of a product has changed over time. As the programmer responsible for this code, you now have to add support for those 14 countries, and also add support for historical exchange rates going back in time.

This is a contrived example, of course, but it does show how programs typically evolve. Program code isn't something you write once and then leave forever. Your program is constantly changing and evolving in response to new requirements, newly discovered bugs, and unexpected consequences. Sometimes, a change that seems simple can be anything but. For example, consider the poor programmer who wrote the get_exchange_rate() function in our previous example. This function now has to support not only the current exchange rate for any given pair of currencies, it also has to return historical exchange rates going back to any desired point in time. If this function is obtaining its information from a source that doesn't support historical exchange rates, then the whole function may need to be rewritten from scratch to support an alternative data source.

Sometimes, programmers and IT managers try to suppress change, for example by writing detailed specifications and then implementing one part of the program at a time (the so-called waterfall method of programming). But change is an integral part of programming, and trying to suppress it is like trying to stop the wind from blowing—it's much better to just accept that your program will change, and learn how to manage the process as well as you can.

Modular techniques are an excellent way of managing change in your programs. For example, as your program grows and evolves, you may find that a particular change requires the addition of a new module to your program:

Programming as a process

You can then import and use that module in the other parts of your program that need to use this new functionality.

Alternatively, you might find that a new feature only requires you to change the contents of a module:

Programming as a process

This is one of the major benefits of modular programming—since the details of how a particular feature is implemented is inside a module, you can often change the internals of a module without affecting any other parts of your program. The rest of your program continues to import and use the module as it did before—only the internal implementation of the module has changed.

Finally, you might find that you need to refactor your program. This is where you have to change the modular organization of your code to improve the way the program works:

Programming as a process

Refactoring may involve moving code between modules as well as creating new modules, removing old ones, and changing the way modules work. In essence, refactoring is the process of rethinking the program so that it works better.

In all of these changes, the use of modules and packages help you to manage the changes you make. Because the various modules and packages each perform a well-defined task, you know exactly which parts of your program need to be changed, and you can limit the effects of your changes to only the affected modules and the parts of the system that use them.

Modular programming won't make change go away, but it will help you to deal with change—and the ongoing process of programming—in the best possible way.

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