In computer science, separation of concerns (SoC) is the process of separating a computer program into distinct features that overlap in functionality as little as possible. A concern is any piece of interest or focus in a program. Typically, concerns are synonymous with features or behaviors. Progress towards SoC is traditionally achieved through modularity of programming and encapsulation (or "transparency" of operation), with the help of information hiding. Layered designs in information systems are also often based on separation of concerns (e.g., presentation layer, business logic...
Progressive enhancement is a strategy for web design that emphasizes accessibility, semantic HTML markup, and external stylesheet and scripting technologies. Progressive enhancement uses web technologies in a layered fashion that allows everyone to access the basic content and functionality of a web page, using any browser or Internet connection, while also providing those with better bandwidth, more advanced browser software or more experience an enhanced version of the page.
History
"Progressive Enhancement" was coined by Steven Champeon of [http://www.hesketh.com hesketh.com] in a ser...
One thing about the internet, you can't always get the information you want without being criticized for totally unrelated things that you don't want to hear... @Purmou
It's like if I go into home depot and ask "Where can I find green paint?" and them am lectured on why green is the ugliest color and I'll regret it forever...
I come here people competent people can show me the problems with what I'm doing. I've become noticeably more competent with javascript in 8 months of hanging out here
Separation of concerns is one of those subjective things though, and there's no reason he can't get his current question answered and make up his own mind on THAT issue later.
// The only difference between arrays and nodelists
Array.prototype.isPrototypeOf([]); // true
NodeList.prototype.prototype.isPrototypeOf(document.getElementsByTagName("div")); // true
var elements = document.getElementsByTagName("*");
for(var i=0;i<elements.length;i++){
var element = elements[i];
var attr = element.attributes;
for(var j=0;j<attr.length;j++){
if(attr[j].nodeValue == 'author'){
element.style.backgroundColor='red';
}
...
I understand some people in these chats can be harsh but (a) this is the internet, this is really the first time you've encountered harsh people? (b) you have the ability to ignore any person by clicking on their name in chat and selecting 'Ignore user'
Well, there's a whole school of thought that you should keep the code close in proximity to things it works on. And there's the separation of concerns school. And they're both pretty subjective until I see somebody conduct a scientific study on it. @CharlesSprayberry
// cache length
var len = elements.length; // length only accessed once. fast
for (var i = 0; i < len; i++) {
}
// length accessed for every iteration of loop. really slow
for (var i = 0; i < elements.length; i++) {
}
@Purmou the main thing you need to know is that .length is not a cheap operation on a NodeList because a NodeList is live. This means that the nodeList reflects the live state of the document. So every time you access .length the nodeList has to double check whether the .length property is correct by recalculation it
Because when it comes down to it, programming should be a black box. It doesn't matter what happens inside, all that matters is what goes into it, and what comes out.
SO strives for that ideal, but it falls far short. What I'm saying is you can't really make the internet clean, respectful, positive, whatever, and neither can I. But what you can do is see how it is why it is and learn to filter out 95% of the crap on it.
@Anfurny, I am sure you are aware of that code has much, much more qualities than simply being a quick hack that works good enough for now. It also needs to be maintainable, efficient and so on
Language analogy
Think of your most favorite story. It is probably beautifully written. To a non-English speaker, just because they can't understand it or comprehend why it is beautiful doesn't detract from its beauty.
Construction analogy
Consider a shoddily built house. It has doors and wind...
this is a goddamn learning community...yes you can't force cleanliness on the internet but the people in the community should act like they are in a learning community, for god's sake
That the boss, and the user, don't care how pretty your code is. And those are the people whose opinion matters. If you can write and maintain unconventional code violating every traditional standard, more power to you.
@Esailija the problem with that code isn't that it's ugly and long. It's that I know somebody wasted time (and time is money) so that black box took more input to make the identical output.
@Anfurny Programming is a black box? That's the craziest thing I've ever heard, even from a business stand-point. Have you never heard of technical debt? Have you never had to maintain an application beyond the launch?
I'm saying, that there are a million different programming rules or memes that people out there will try to push on you. And many of them are Bullshit that you would have been told the opposite of x years ago.
And I also take pride in my work. I don't want it to just get the job done, I want a professional programmer to look at it and say, "This guy knows his stuff."
It isn't a personal attack, you personally admit that you don't really care what the code looks like. I think you're wrong and would make for a likely horrible code base to work with for anybody but yourself at that moment in time.
Okay, but objectively speaking, code isn't somewhere to show off and boost your ego about hypothetical mentors approving of you. It's about the problem itself @CharlesSprayberry
Who says that I'm showing off my ego? I feel better about an application that I feel is well written. I mean, I expect at some point for OTHER people to use my stuff.
And if you're commenting your code super-thoroughly when all the other developers don't speak english, perhaps you should come up with a more pragmatic strategy to communicate...
One of you believes all functions need comments, one believes that comments are an indication of obstruse code, and hard-line java developers think that you only should use accessors in classes (no public vars)
@Anfurny, maybe they're zealous because anyone who needs to touch code that was written by someone who "disagrees with separations of concerns" will want to kill himself
And being told "You can't learn anything about construction until you learn why screws are superior to nails, even though they are a little more expensive they follow the reversibility principle yadda yadda yadda"
But what I don't want to do is get caught is this fashion loop of changing the way I do very very simple stuff every couple years and learning a hundred new buzzwords that can't make my code run any faster or do anything new, or even be fixed much faster.
@Anfurny The only thing I have said is that programming should not be considered a black box, SoC is a basic fundamental concept of programming and that variable and functions names should be descriptive.
@Anfurny yes there's a lot of bullshit out there. A lot of it is personal opinion or subjective. A lot of this simply does not help. And a lot of it is bad practice.