Moved

Moved. See https://slott56.github.io. All new content goes to the new site. This is a legacy, and will likely be dropped five years after the last post in Jan 2023.

Tuesday, June 9, 2015

On Waiting to Write "Serious Code"

Someone told me they weren't yet ready to write "serious code." They needed to spend more time doing something that's not coding.

I'm unclear on what they were doing. It appears they have some barriers that I can't see.

They had sample data. They had a problem statement. They had an existing solution that was not very good. I couldn't see any reason for waiting. Indeed, I can't figure out what "serious" code is. Does that mean there's frivolous code?

Because there was a previous solution, they had a minimum viable product already defined: it has to do what the previous version did, only be better in some way. One could trivially transform the previous product into unit test cases and an acceptance test case. Few things could be more amenable to coding than having test cases.

Since everything necessary seemed to be in place, I had a complete brain cramp when they mentioned they weren't yet ready to write "serious" code. "Serious?" Seriously?

It appears that this developer suffers from a bad case of Fear of Code™. I know some common sources of this fear.
  1. Waterfall Project Experience (WPE™.) Old people (like me,) who started in Waterfall World, were told that we had to produce mountains of design before we produced any code. No one knew why in any precise way. Indeed, there's ample evidence that too much design is simply a way to introduce noise into the process. In spite of real questions, some folks think that you can write a design so detailed that a coder can just type in the code from the design. (This level of design is isomorphic to code; to avoid ambiguity it must be written as code.)
  2. Relational Database Hegemony (RDH™.) Folks (like me,) who were DBA's, know that databases require a lot of design and a lot of review before they can be created. Writing stored procedures requires even more design and review time. You don't just slap an SP out there. It might be "bad" or "create problems." Also, when you insist on DBA's writing application code, it takes super-detailed, code-level design details. In effect, you must write the code for the DBA to write your code back to you. 
  3. One and Done (OAD™.) Some people like to feel that they can write code once and it can be a thing of beauty and a joy forever. The idea of a rewrite is anathema to these people. While this is obviously silly, people still like the conceit that they can produce some prototype code that will be a proper part of every future release forever and always. It's not possible to make all of the decisions the first time regarding adoption and scaling and user preferences. Your prototype code will get replaced eventually: get over it. Write the prototype, get funding, move forward. Don't dither trying to make a bunch of future-oriented decisions based on a future you cannot actually foresee. You can't "future-proof" your code.
  4. Learnings are Expensive (LAE™.) You can find people that think that the sequence of (spike, POC, version 0, version 1) is too expensive. They are sure that learning is a project drag, since no "tangible" results are created by learning. This means that they don't value intellectual property or knowledge work, either; an attitude is actually destructive to the organization. Knowledge is everything: software captures knowledge: a spike followed by a POC followed by version zero will arrive on the scene more quickly than any alternative strategy. Don't waste time trying to write version 1 from a position of ignorance.
  5. Tools are Expensive (TAE™.) Some people feel that -- since tools are expensive -- they should be used rarely. Back in the olden days, when a compiler took many minutes to produce an error report, you had to be sure the code was good. (I'm old enough that I remember when compiles took hours. Really.) Those days are gone. Most compilers today work at the "speed of light" -- if they were any faster, you couldn't tell, because you can't click any faster. For dynamic languages, like Python, the speed with which code can be emitted makes all tool considerations quaint and silly.
  6. Diagram it to Death (DTD™.) Rather than write code, some folks would rather talk about writing code. To them, email, powerpoint, and whiteboard are cheaper than coding. This is a false economy. Nothing is saved by avoiding code. Time is wasted drawing diagrams of things at a level of detail that mirrors the code. Pictures aren't bad in general. Detailed pictures are simply a stalling tactic.
I find it frustrating when people search for excuses to avoid simply creating code. While I see a number of sources, there are many counter-arguments available. 
  1. Waterfall is dead. Make something minimal that works for this sprint. Call it a "spike" if that makes you happier. Clean it up in the next sprint. Create value early. Expand on the features later.
  2. Databases are free now. SQLite and similar products mean that we can prototype a database without waiting around for DBA's to give us permission to make progress. Build the database now, get something that works. Rework the database as your understanding of the problem matures. Rework the database as the problem itself matures and morphs. Nothing is static; the universe is expanding; do something now.
  3. No code lasts forever. Waiting around to create some kind of perfect value one time only is perfect silliness. Create value early and often. Discarding code means you're making progress. If you think it's important, write "draft" on every electronic document which might get changed. (Hint: version numbers are smarter than putting "draft" everywhere.)
  4. A spike and code happens more quickly than code. It's a matter of technical risk: unfinished work is an "exposure" -- an unrealized investment. Failing soon is better than researching extensively in an effort prevent a failure that could have been found quickly.
  5. Use a dynamic language and avoid all overheads.
  6. Keep the diagrams high-level. Code is the only way to meaningfully capture details. Code endures better than some out-of-date Visio file that's in Sharepoint completely disconnected from GitHub.
It's imperative to break down the roadblocks. All "pre-coding" activities are little more than emotional props: knock them down and start coding.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.