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Totally out of my depth
Message
From
08/04/2011 08:49:03
 
General information
Forum:
Microsoft SQL Server
Category:
Stored procedures, Triggers, UDFs
Environment versions
SQL Server:
SQL Server 2000
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
01506238
Message ID:
01506604
Views:
38
Charles yells backhoe and the client give him a plastic trowel.

Are you a Justified watcher. I watched the pilot "Fire in the Hole" last night and we couldn't decide wether it was good or bad.


>I think most of us feel that way. Unfortunately we don't always have that luxury given timeframes and budgets.
>
>>Of course I'm the kind of guy who looks at a kludgy app and yells "Backhoe !" <bg>
>>
>>>I agree. My conference sessions this year are all about making the right decisions and how we can do things correctly. One presentation is called "Software Gardening". It starts out by discussing that software development is not like construction, but more like gardening. Code needs to be nurtured, pruned, replanted, and sometimes composted. I've seen statistics that the average application is rewritten every four versions. And it's mainly because the care and nurturing of the code wasn't there.
>>>
>>>>That's why I tend to favor rewrites over fixits if the app I'm supposed to fix is fundamentally flawed - or was just never really designed but was just cobbled together. When I did a lot of VFP rescue work, I ran into resistance until I demonstrated that with a framework in place and a revisiting of requirements it was often cheaper and definitely yielded a better result to just do it right.
>>>>
>>>>Sometimes the old app - or code - isn't bad so much as the design is inappropriate and is something one will just have to keep fighting if you don't take a step back and fix it. A bad code module can be refactored, but a bad data design is forever <s>
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