Categories
Software Architect

Fight repetition

Book: 97 Things Every Software Architect Should Know
Publisher: O’Reilly Media
Author: Richard Monson-Haefel
97 Things Every Software Architect Should Know – 46/97

'Coz sharing is caring

Are your developers performing recurring tasks that needs little thinking? Can you find recurring patterns in the code? Can you spot code that’s been written copy-paste-modify style? If that’s the case, your team is moving slower than they should and oddly enough – you may be the cause.

Before explaining why, let’s agree on a couple of truths about software development:
1) Duplication is evil.
2) Repetitive work slows down development.

As an architect, you set the tone. You’ve got the best overall grasp of the system and you probably wrote a trend-setting, end-to-end, vertical slice of the system that serves as an example for the team – an example that has been copied many times by now. Whenever a developer copies anything – be it a few lines of code, an XML-file, or a class – that’s a clear indication that something could be made simpler or even completely abstracted away. Most often, it’s not the domain logic that is copied; it’s the infrastructure code that just has to be there to make it work. For that reason, it’s crucial that you can envision the effects your examples have. Any code and configuration in your examples will be the base for tens, hundreds, or maybe thousands other slices of the system, which means you have to make sure that your code is clean, intention revealing, and contains nothing except what can’t be abstracted away – the domain problem itself. As an architect, you need to be highly sensitive to any kind of repetitive patterns, since anything you write will (ironically) be repeated.

But that doesn’t happen in your system, right? Take a look at that configuration file. What needs to be different if applied on another slice of the system and what will stay the same? Look at a typical business layer method. Is there a pattern that shows up in other methods as well, containing things like transaction handling, logging, authentication or auditing? How about the data access layer? Any code in there that will be the same except for names of entities and fields? Look broader. Can you find two or three lines of code that frequently seems to go together and even though they operate on different objects, it feels like the same thing? These are all examples of repetition. Repetition in code is something that developers eventually learn to filter out and ignore when reading the code, once they figured out where the interesting variabilities are found, but even if the developers get used to it – it slows them down. Code like that is clearly written for computers execute, not for developers to read.

Your responsibility is to remove it. To do that, you may need to harvest frameworks, create better abstractions, perhaps ask the toolsmith to setup an aspect framework or write a few small code generators, but the repetition won’t go away unless someone does something about it.

That someone is you.

'Coz sharing is caring

By Swatantra Kumar

Swatantra is an engineering leader with a successful record in building, nurturing, managing, and leading a multi-disciplinary, diverse, and distributed team of engineers and managers developing and delivering solutions. Professionally, he oversees solution design-development-delivery, cloud transition, IT strategies, technical and organizational leadership, TOM, IT governance, digital transformation, Innovation, stakeholder management, management consulting, and technology vision & strategy. When he's not working, he enjoys reading about and working with new technologies, and trying to get his friends to make the move to new web trends. He has written, co-written, and published many articles in international journals, on various domains/topics including Open Source, Networks, Low-Code, Mobile Technologies, and Business Intelligence. He made a proposal for an information management system at the University level during his graduation days.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.