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Programming Principles

There are certain universal laws and principles in software development that guide architects, programmers, and anyone needing to design software. This page lists quite a few of those principles, although it's far from complete. This page is a fork of programming-principles repository by Lars Kappert, who has done most of the work collecting the material.

KISS

Most systems work best if they are kept simple rather than made complex.

Why

  • Less code takes less time to write, has less bugs, and is easier to modify.
  • Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication.
  • It seems that perfection is reached not when there is nothing left to add, but when there is nothing left to take away.

Resources

YAGNI

YAGNI stands for "you aren't gonna need it": don't implement something until it is necessary.

Why

  • Any work that's only used for a feature that's needed tomorrow, means losing effort from features that need to be done for the current iteration.
  • It leads to code bloat; the software becomes larger and more complicated.

How

  • Always implement things when you actually need them, never when you just foresee that you need them.

Resources

Do The Simplest Thing That Could Possibly Work

Why

  • Real progress against the real problem is maximized if we just work on what the problem really is.

How

  • Ask yourself: "What is the simplest thing that could possibly work?"

Resources

Separation of Concerns

Separation of concerns is a design principle for separating a computer program into distinct sections, such that each section addresses a separate concern. For example the business logic of the application is a concern and the user interface is another concern. Changing the user interface should not require changes to business logic and vice versa.

Quoting Edsger W. Dijkstra (1974):

It is what I sometimes have called "the separation of concerns", which, even if not perfectly possible, is yet the only available technique for effective ordering of one's thoughts, that I know of. This is what I mean by "focusing one's attention upon some aspect": it does not mean ignoring the other aspects, it is just doing justice to the fact that from this aspect's point of view, the other is irrelevant.

Why

  • Simplify development and maintenance of software applications.
  • When concerns are well-separated, individual sections can be reused, as well as developed and updated independently.

How

  • Break program functionality into separate modules that overlap as little as possible.

Resources

Keep things DRY

Every piece of knowledge must have a single, unambiguous, authoritative representation within a system.

Each significant piece of functionality in a program should be implemented in just one place in the source code. Where similar functions are carried out by distinct pieces of code, it is generally beneficial to combine them into one by abstracting out the varying parts.

Why

  • Duplication (inadvertent or purposeful duplication) can lead to maintenance nightmares, poor factoring, and logical contradictions.
  • A modification of any single element of a system does not require a change in other logically unrelated elements.
  • Additionally, elements that are logically related all change predictably and uniformly, and are thus kept in sync.

How

  • Put business rules, long expressions, if statements, math formulas, metadata, etc. in only one place.
  • Identify the single, definitive source of every piece of knowledge used in your system, and then use that source to generate applicable instances of that knowledge (code, documentation, tests, etc).
  • Apply the Rule of three.

Resources

Related

Code For The Maintainer

Why

  • Maintenance is by far the most expensive phase of any project.

How

  • Be the maintainer.
  • Always code as if the person who ends up maintaining your code is a violent psychopath who knows where you live.
  • Always code and comment in such a way that if someone a few notches junior picks up the code, they will take pleasure in reading and learning from it.
  • Don't make me think.
  • Use the Principle of Least Astonishment.

Resources

Avoid Premature Optimization

Quoting Donald Knuth:

Programmers waste enormous amounts of time thinking about, or worrying about, the speed of noncritical parts of their programs, and these attempts at efficiency actually have a strong negative impact when debugging and maintenance are considered. We should forget about small efficiencies, say about 97% of the time: premature optimization is the root of all evil. Yet we should not pass up our opportunities in that critical 3%.

Understanding what is and isn’t "premature" is critical of course.

Why

  • It is unknown upfront where the bottlenecks will be.
  • After optimization, it might be harder to read and thus maintain.

How

Resources

Minimise Coupling

Coupling between modules/components is their degree of mutual interdependence; lower coupling is better. In other words, coupling is the probability that code unit "B" will "break" after an unknown change to code unit "A".

Why

  • A change in one module usually forces a ripple effect of changes in other modules.
  • Assembly of modules might require more effort and/or time due to the increased inter-module dependency.
  • A particular module might be harder to reuse and/or test because dependent modules must be included.
  • Developers might be afraid to change code because they aren't sure what might be affected.

How

  • Eliminate, minimise, and reduce complexity of necessary relationships.
  • By hiding implementation details, coupling is reduced.
  • Apply the Law of Demeter.

Resources

Law of Demeter

Don't talk to strangers.

Why

  • It usually tightens coupling
  • It might reveal too much implementation details

How

A method of an object may only call methods of:

  1. The object itself.
  2. An argument of the method.
  3. Any object created within the method.
  4. Any direct properties/fields of the object.

Resources

Composition Over Inheritance

Why

  • Less coupling between classes.
  • Using inheritance, subclasses easily make assumptions, and break LSP.

How

  • Test for LSP (substitutability) to decide when to inherit.
  • Compose when there is a "has a" (or "uses a") relationship, inherit when "is a".

Resources

Orthogonality

The basic idea of orthogonality is that things that are not related conceptually should not be related in the system.

Source: Be Orthogonal

It is associated with simplicity; the more orthogonal the design, the fewer exceptions. This makes it easier to learn, read and write programs in a programming language. The meaning of an orthogonal feature is independent of context; the key parameters are symmetry and consistency.

Source: Orthogonality

Robustness Principle

Be conservative in what you do, be liberal in what you accept from others

Collaborating services depend on each others interfaces. Often the interfaces need to evolve causing the other end to receive unspecified data. A naive implementation refuses to collaborate if the received data does not strictly follow the specification. A more sophisticated implementation will still work ignoring the data it does not recognize.

Why

  • In order to be able to evolve services you need to ensure that a provider can make changes to support new demands while causing minimal breakage to their existing clients.

How

  • Code that sends commands or data to other machines (or to other programs on the same machine) should conform completely to the specifications, but code that receives input should accept non-conformant input as long as the meaning is clear.

Resources

Inversion of Control

Inversion of Control is also known as the Hollywood Principle, "Don't call us, we'll call you". It is a design principle in which custom-written portions of a computer program receive the flow of control from a generic framework. Inversion of control carries the strong connotation that the reusable code and the problem-specific code are developed independently even though they operate together in an application.

Why

  • Inversion of control is used to increase modularity of the program and make it extensible.
  • To decouple the execution of a task from implementation.
  • To focus a module on the task it is designed for.
  • To free modules from assumptions about how other systems do what they do and instead rely on contracts.
  • To prevent side effects when replacing a module.

How

  • Using Factory pattern
  • Using Service Locator pattern
  • Using Dependency Injection
  • Using contextualized lookup
  • Using Template Method pattern
  • Using Strategy pattern

Resources

Maximise Cohesion

Cohesion of a single module/component is the degree to which its responsibilities form a meaningful unit; higher cohesion is better.

Why

  • Increased difficulty in understanding modules.
  • Increased difficulty in maintaining a system, because logical changes in the domain affect multiple modules, and because changes in one module require changes in related modules.
  • Increased difficulty in reusing a module because most applications won’t need the random set of operations provided by a module.

How

  • Group related functionalities sharing a single responsibility (e.g. in a class).

Resources

Liskov Substitution Principle

The LSP is all about expected behavior of objects:

Objects in a program should be replaceable with instances of their subtypes without altering the correctness of that program.

Resources

Open/Closed Principle

Software entities (e.g. classes) should be open for extension, but closed for modification. I.e. such an entity can allow its behavior to be modified without altering its source code.

Why

  • Improve maintainability and stability by minimizing changes to existing code.

How

  • Write classes that can be extended (as opposed to classes that can be modified).
  • Expose only the moving parts that need to change, hide everything else.

Resources

Single Responsibility Principle

A class should never have more than one reason to change.

Long version: Every class should have a single responsibility, and that responsibility should be entirely encapsulated by the class. Responsibility can be defined as a reason to change, so a class or module should have one, and only one, reason to change.

Why

  • Maintainability: changes should be necessary only in one module or class.

How

Resources

Hide Implementation Details

A software module hides information (i.e. implementation details) by providing an interface, and not leak any unnecessary information.

Why

  • When the implementation changes, the interface clients are using does not have to change.

How

  • Minimize accessibility of classes and members.
  • Don’t expose member data in public.
  • Avoid putting private implementation details into a class’s interface.
  • Decrease coupling to hide more implementation details.

Resources

Curly's Law

Curly's Law is about choosing a single, clearly defined goal for any particular bit of code: Do One Thing.

Encapsulate What Changes

A good design identifies the hotspots that are most likely to change and encapsulates them behind an API. When an anticipated change then occurs, the modifications are kept local.

Why

  • To minimize required modifications when a change occurs

How

  • Encapsulate the concept that varies behind an API
  • Possibly separate the varying concept into its own module

Resources

Interface Segregation Principle

Reduce fat interfaces into multiple smaller and more specific client specific interfaces. An interface should be more dependent on the code that calls it than the code that implements it.

Why

  • If a class implements methods that are not needed the caller needs to know about the method implementation of that class. For example if a class implements a method but simply throws then the caller will need to know that this method shouldn't actually be called.

How

Resources

Boy-Scout Rule

The Boy Scouts of America have a simple rule that we can apply to our profession: "Leave the campground cleaner than you found it". The boy-scout rule states that we should always leave the code cleaner than we found it.

Why

  • When making changes to an existing codebase the code quality tends to degrade, accumulating technical debt. Following the boyscout rule, we should mind the quality with each commit. Technical debt is resisted by continuous refactoring, no matter how small.

How

  • With each commit make sure it does not degrade the codebase quality.
  • Any time someone sees some code that isn't as clear as it should be, they should take the opportunity to fix it right there and then.

Resources

Command Query Separation

The Command Query Separation principle states that each method should be either a command that performs an action or a query that returns data to the caller but not both. Asking a question should not modify the answer.

With this principle applied the programmer can code with much more confidence. The query methods can be used anywhere and in any order since they do not mutate the state. With commands one has to be more careful.

Why

  • By clearly separating methods into queries and commands the programmer can code with additional confidence without knowing each method's implementation details.

How

  • Implement each method as either a query or a command
  • Apply naming convention to method names that implies whether the method is a query or a command

Resources

Murphy's Law

Anything that can go wrong will go wrong.

It seems to be a universal law that when there is even the smallest possibility of something going wrong, it eventually will go wrong. It makes total sense when we think about probabilities and an infinite amount of trials. The law also applies to software development.

Resources

Brooks's Law

Adding manpower to a late software project makes it later.

The law is related to software project management and was introduced by Fred Brooks in his famous book 'The Mythical Man-Month'. The essence of the law is that adding new developers to a software project does not make them productive immediately but conversely takes time from the other team members due to communication overhead.

Resources

Linus's Law

Given enough eyeballs, all bugs are shallow.

The law is originating from the book 'The Cathedral and the Bazaar' by Eric S. Raymond and was named in honor of the famous Finnish inventor of Linux operating system, Linus Torvalds. It's basically a praise to software reviewing process where multiple developers inspect the piece of code before it's accepted and merged.

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