He's a Junior, elaborate on the fact that he will not be the only person working on it and eventually someone somewhere is going to break the 'convention' and that's when all hell breaks loose. Pretend that he's so smart to never do that, but touch on the subject that his colleagues might not be.
Honestly it feels like he's just defending his decision. It's not wrong now but can very well be in the future. If he absolutely refuses to learn beyond "what works", then it's a lost case anyway.
@wadry I'm gonna trademark that. Bag of Spanners, a codebase that has the same characteristics as a Big Ball of Mud (dependencies everywhere, no clear relationships or delineation) but overburdened with patterns used badly so that there are strong lines that delineate nothing of value
@wadry Might be Friday syndrome. I suffer for that every Friday, too. It's an utter unwillingness to learn something new just prior to enjoying the look weekend.
My point is that seeing those as dependencies doesn't help all that much. There's only so much meaning that you can convey in a constructor signature of course
And that is just in a inherited backing property in the base controller that uses Dependency.Get<T> over a static helper to access a static kernel somewhere.
Yeah, shoot me, I only have one dependency, so fuck you all.
Actually, I don't even have a kernel as in using a library for IoC
@RoelvanUden Yeh I don't have UoW yet so in the meantime these things are needed, but surely you must have situations where business logic depends on other business logic parts?
I know it would be nicer to just let some ioc bind together things and pass them into a constructor and set them in fields but jeez, it's way too much code for something so fucking simple. if the project becomes larger, i can rip this out, but it's not going to be needed. :)
@JohanLarsson Sure. I just feel like there should be an opposing voice in this group agreement, sure, looking from the best practices that is the absolute best way and I would do it just like that if needed, but 9/10 times people don't work on a project that benefits enough to compensate the downsides.
SELECT * FROM Users
LEFT OUTER JOIN
FriendsMapping F1
ON Users.UserId = F1.User1
LEFT OUTER JOIN
FriendsMapping F2
ON Users.UserId = F2.User2
WHERE F1.User1 IS NULL AND F2.User2 IS NULL
I'm painfully aware. At least not using IoC is a choice, but I'd really want to use .NET 4.6.1 for everything at least, start using C#6 features, and async. Like I said, I can on new projects, but not on the long running ones.
which is fucked.
OTOH Code Contracts and async is a lot of shit too.
@RoelvanUden prefer to just use code analysis rules to define a level of coding standards and then assume that if the standards are met then all is good, but code contracts to me just feel like code for codes sake
I took some time to create a nice table for the Java access modifiers. I noticed that there's an almost identical question on C# access modifiers. I've never written any C#, but if someone here would like to post a similar table on that question, I'm happy to share the svg-version of the table.