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Showing posts from April, 2015

Refactoring 101 for complete beginners

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Working in the field for a while, I find that new folks in the field have a problem with refactoring. I think the primary problems are: Code without tests is dangerous and frankly scary to refactor It's really easy to copy/paste code, and if you don't have to support and bug fix things, the merits of clean and concise code are lost While I don't claim to fix anything, here's a quick guide on how/why to refactor (for complete newbies):

The Hazard of Not Taking Things Personally at Work

Don't take it personally is an oft repeated platitude I hear repeated in the work environment. While I think it's unhealthy to take problems at work and things out of your control as personal affronts, I think a healthy dose of taking personal ownership of your work is "a good thing" (tm). I say this because the counterpoint to not taking things personally is not giving a damn and I think this is a far worse situation than folks who are personally invested and passionate about their work. In my experience, the most successful folks I've interacted with take a very deep personal interest in their life's work. They are passionate, appropriately loyal, and care a great deal about the quality of the product or service they provide. Folks that punch the clock, point fingers, and skip home after their "8 (or so) hours of physical presence" are huge problem and all too often a key source of low quality work and cumbersome process. More dangerously