By: Jason
This immediately made me think of some of the WSGI apps I’ve been digging through lately. It’s a useful and conceptually cool standard, but I’m finding that it’s also very easy to abuse.
View ArticleBy: EastwoodDC
If spaghetti, lasagna, and baklava are metaphors for bad programming, then what food represents good programming? And to answer my own silly question: How about Mexican food. Seven basic ingredients...
View ArticleBy: CJ
I like the Mexican food analogy, but I immediately thought of a hamburger: You’ve got the meat (the interesting code that the program is all about), the buns (a convenient, portable UI), and the...
View ArticleBy: igorbrejc.net » Fresh Catch For August 11th
[...] Baklava code — The Endeavour [...]
View ArticleBy: bb
I’m disappointed you didn’t stick with the Italian theme; something that conjours up images of chaos in my head
View ArticleBy: Well Known Programming Slangs | Read My Chips !!!
[...] Baklava code This is a code, which has too many layers. [...]
View ArticleBy: Bart K,
Oh man, this reminds me… One time, I had to work on some guy’s web-based scheduling application that he wrote in Perl. I’m something of a Perl guru (although experiences with other peoples’ Perl code...
View ArticleBy: Software to slice bread — The Endeavour
[...] You wanted a banana but you got a gorilla holding the banana Baklava code [...]
View ArticleBy: fpiat
When talking to my students, I use the term of MacDo Code. More international than Baklava, and more dangerous too.
View ArticleBy: Russian novel programming — The Endeavour
[...] Baklava code Software to slice bread [...]
View ArticleBy: Gerd
A coworker coined the term ravioli code for systems without a recognizeable organization of its class structure: just plenty of objects in tomato sauce.
View ArticleBy: Chris
I think the pun about baklava leaking is a bit of a non sequitur. ISTM, leaks (a kind of bug) are orthogonal to the amount of abstraction of a given piece of code. If the code has “too much”...
View ArticleBy: Jason
This immediately made me think of some of the WSGI apps I’ve been digging through lately. It’s a useful and conceptually cool standard, but I’m finding that it’s also very easy to abuse.
View ArticleBy: EastwoodDC
If spaghetti, lasagna, and baklava are metaphors for bad programming, then what food represents good programming? And to answer my own silly question: How about Mexican food. Seven basic ingredients...
View ArticleBy: CJ
I like the Mexican food analogy, but I immediately thought of a hamburger: You’ve got the meat (the interesting code that the program is all about), the buns (a convenient, portable UI), and the...
View ArticleBy: igorbrejc.net » Fresh Catch For August 11th
[...] Baklava code — The Endeavour [...]
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