Articles


Introduction

This time it won’t be my favorite rant about certain operating system. Instead, just a few thoughts about the psychology of bad code.

The broken windows theory, an academic theory proposed by James Q. Wilson and George Kelling in 1982, is a metaphor for disorder within neighborhoods. Their theory links disorder and incivility within a community to subsequent occurrences of serious crime. – Encyclopedia Britannica 

The Tale of Shrubbery Code

Once, in the past, me and my team had a discussion about event handlers in front-end code. We looked in bewilderment at some ancient code. Something similar to this Vanilla JS (I’m a big fan of Vanilla JS, to be clear):

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We’ve all been there: the kick-off meeting that was nothing more than 60 minutes of your life that you’ll never get back. So now that it’s your turn to run one, you’re determined not to go down the same path.

But where did those kick-off-meetings-gone-wrong actually go wrong? What were their fatal flaws? And how can you make your meeting a good use of everyone’s time?

Source de l’article sur DZone