Talk:You ain't gonna need it
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* Finally, YAGNI keeps the cognitive overhead down when looking at the code. It self-documents because by it's very existence, it declares what the software actually does. | * Finally, YAGNI keeps the cognitive overhead down when looking at the code. It self-documents because by it's very existence, it declares what the software actually does. | ||
− | [[User:Lindsay | + | [[User:Lindsay | Lindsay Kay]] |
Revision as of 02:02, 6 October 2008
Added little explanation of the yagni --Dom 03:53, 5 August 2008 (UTC)
Just my two cents: some arguments for YAGNI.
- Nothing is more of a pain than chasing bugs in code that isn't even executing!!
- It keeps the cognitive overhead down when looking at strange code.
- Dead code is not part of the integration-testing loop, so in a test-driven process, it's not valid code. It also tends to fall behind requirements.
- Finally, YAGNI keeps the cognitive overhead down when looking at the code. It self-documents because by it's very existence, it declares what the software actually does.