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[Dcc-dev] New Year's Eve bulletin


From: Julia Alston
Subject: [Dcc-dev] New Year's Eve bulletin
Date: Fri, 6 Oct 2006 10:32:06 -0200
User-agent: Thunderbird 1.5.0.7 (Windows/20060909)


But in fact, there may be more pages than before, if the margins are made smaller. Chances are pretty good that your tests will be broken by defects that exist in the new code.
We let bugs creep in.
Decide on which layer a class belongs to, each time you create a class. I personally think that it's timethat we start adopting quality practices for database development.
someone else appears to own the problem, and if you attempt to take it on you may be working outside your area of focus. those are always fun. We let bugs creep in.
lots of opportunities to write imperfect code or introduce defects when modifying the code.
But he is describing a variation on that code smell. It is much easier to find, and then fix, those defects if you've written two new lines of code than two thousand. It is incredibly simple - and yet what a powerful action that is. Often, everyone recognizes a problem exists yet it is small enough or happens so infrequently that it seems that the problem is not important and not worth solving. The author, Scott Boulch, is clearly a clever marketer - and good for him! Or even changes your code? Interesting magazine - it also has articles by James Bach, Rex Black, Michael Bolton, Duncan Card, Fiona Charles, Cem Kaner, Joe Larizza and Richard Bornet. Construction equipment auctions are biggies, too.
Interesting magazine - it also has articles by James Bach, Rex Black, Michael Bolton, Duncan Card, Fiona Charles, Cem Kaner, Joe Larizza and Richard Bornet.
The most recent is The Death Of AdSense.
But he is describing a variation on that code smell.


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