9:38 AM
I researched "SOLID" design principles a bit this night so I can do an ELI5 explanation in case anyone questions my authority. And, at least for now, I get the impression SOLID is pretentious elite-talk. It sounds advanced and complicated. But it's just an ad-hoc list of guidelines that apply to object oriented programming.
"Open/Closed Principle" was conceived by a guy who thought classes would be distributed as binary objects, which triggered the idea of "classes should be open for extension, but closed for modification". BTW: extension means inheritance in this context.
Now, people explain "Open/Closed Principle" with an example like enums are bad, because extending them requires source code modification, and you need to update switches.
Liskov Substitution Principle sounds super intellectual. But Barbara Liskov herself was surprised when she first heard about "Liskov Substitution Principle". She had once made a remark that subclasses should be substitutable without requiring the user code to make changes.
She thought it was obvious.
Single Responsibility Principle is explained as "a class should do only one thing". Then it was refined to "a class should have only one reason to change". How confusing is that.
A better way to explain it would be: look at your member variables. Can you identify subgroups that are only used by a subset of the methods? Then that's probably an indication you can split that off into a separate component. (And this is not even a great way to explain it, yet infinitely better than "a class should have only one reason to change".)
"Interface segregation principle" solves a problem that I'm not even familiar with.
Dependency inversion principle is kinda OK.
Meanwhile, the really important concepts are not discussed: coupling and cohesion, local reasoning, composability, interface specification. Those are the building blocks of good software.