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From
04/05/2000 11:43:57
 
 
To
03/05/2000 18:17:33
General information
Forum:
Visual FoxPro
Category:
Coding, syntax & commands
Title:
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
00365597
Message ID:
00366132
Views:
16
Oh yeah....I've often offered to rearrange the original programmer ("I can make San Francisco and back in a day"). Mostly I just deal with the froggy (Oh look, jumping to yet ANOTHER proc) code.

In reality, I don't have a huge problem with using #DEFINE and include files AS LONG AS YOU DON'T RUN OFF THE FACE OF THE BLEEDIN' EARTH WITH IT! I sorta look at it like the C programmers who want to get as much functionality into one statement as they can ("I can write that program in 5 lines Alex!").

Unfortunately, those people who would tend go a tad bit overboard with #defines don't think they are, no matter HOW whacko they're making the rest of us! :)




>more like "Waiting for Godot" then?
>
>Apparently you're already running into some serious maintenance issues with that contractor's work?
>
>I'm interested in this discussion, though I'd tend to side with George -- which seems a minority opinion. In my own work, I find that in a system of significant complexity, 20-30 tables with associated statuses and business rules, that constants are a necessity -- at least for me to comprehend what's going on.
>
>George stated it well -- that it's the meaning of the value rather than the value itself which is of significance if you're reading the program (as distinct from debugging). The inability to ascertain the value of a constant in the VFP debugger is a hindrance. But, if you're picking up a program for the first time and trying to understand it, I find that constants add a tremendous amount to intelligibility.
>
>I also tend to write in a more stuctured programming style, and now, continue to try to understand and use object orientation in useful ways. Again, those strategies allow building more robust and maintainable solutions from my perspective.
>
>I was curious about how your department handles those issues -- how do you create standards, procedure libraries, standard class libraries and then inform members of the department about how to use them?
>
>I spent a summer in college down at UT some time ago. Particularly enjoyed the Austin music scene. I guess Austin's changed a bit over the past decade with the impact of startups.
>
>
> Jay
"You don't manage people. You manage things - people you lead" Adm. Grace Hopper
Pflugerville, between a Rock and a Weird Place
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