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user4651282
23:02
I think we we will continue to blame the OOP here. Some would say that we just have not mastered it. Let's not argue :)
user4651282
okay, I'll go look at how superheroes solve superproblem.
@Atomic_alarm it does have it's place under the sun.
user4651282
@Kamiccolo, I don't deny merits,but should be able to see the flaws.
OOP is all about abstraction, not necessarily overengineering => ask your self: what is easier: update size, space-left and the data itself -- or -- call it "Array" and think about it as an object?
post some C code fast
23:05
OOP is just a tool how we are abstracting things, from data, to something more higher level, like a behaviour or anything else
the fact that you saw overengineered code is not the fault of OOP (as a concept) but badly written code
@holgac citation needed on "month or two" and "lots of months"
@PeterVaro definitely. But I think one of the ideas in OOP that lead to overengineered code is not separating the objects and behaviours. Also, inheritance makes the code harder (or at least, slower) to follow
@holgac definitely not => a well designed object hierarchy makes things easier to maintain, more modular, and easier to extend
and OOP is definitely the way to differentiate data from behaviour: those are called properties and methods
@BartekBanachewicz well it's clear I can't give any citation beside my personal experience on linux kernel and c++ projects I worked on. Me and a few of my friends started reading about linux kernel together, and we got a basic understanding of kernel if a few months.
So it might just be you're inexperienced with working with properly structured code.
Because, you know, a few months is an absurd time to familiarize yourself with a codebase.
it typically means it doesn't have proper abstractions set up
and to understand one piece you have to read about a lot of them.
what OOP allows is that if you want to understand one piece of a big system, you can read just that one piece.
and inheritance is merely a tool to avoid code duplication, but OOP doesn't equal inheritance.
23:22
@PeterVaro yeah but methods and properties belong to objects, so that's not a separation at all
@BartekBanachewicz in big projects, that usually never works. You usually need to make your way through lots of virtual functions, try to guess which object is of which type, then go to a method defined in that type etc.
@holgac you're thinking about wrong abstraction level.
you may still say the projects I've worked on might not be properly designed, and I don't have anything to say to that
@holgac kind of. Why don't you read code of a properly designed OOP codebase.
give me an open source example
OGRE game engine was kinda good, but I don't recall any other properly designed OOP projects that I worked with
@holgac how else should it be?
23:27
@holgac OGRE wasn't properly designed at all. There were singletons and other nasty problems in it.
I mean the abstraction here is that your are thinking of "linked data" and "behaviour" as a single entity/token
@holgac Dunno how well you know C++, but Scylla's codebase is really good. It's a big, real project, not a toy.
and higher level means: you are not concerned about those "layers" anymore
btw, the kernel itself has OOP semantics everywhere
as I've told you several times, OOP is not language related, not even based on specific language features
it is a way of designing, separating and using your code, while making it reusable, extendable, modular and sometimes even generic
the higher level you get, the more you will focus on the "what" and the "why" rather than the "how"
@BartekBanachewicz I'll have a look at it soon. I haven't used c++ for a while so I haven't used c++11 or c++14 though
@holgac I'd recommend reading some modern C# codebase then
23:32
which is most of time what you want: be more productive ;)
@PeterVaro That usually brings many pitfalls. What I'm trying to say in the whole conversation is that OOP by itself may be good or bad, but it provides ways for bad engineering.
In this specific case, let's think about string manipulation. If you use c, you'll know a strcpy actually copies, malloc actually allocates etc. But a higher level language user would concatenate strings without thinking that, usually leading to poor performance
@holgac it could be a bad just as much as imperative code bases (or as a matter of fact anything else)
I know this has nothing to do with higher level itself, but it leads to that
there can be pitfalls everywhere => I don't even know anything in programming that doesn't have some sort of drawbacks
(think about space-time complexity for one => there is no perfect data type :) )
23:36
two days, in fact. Quote:
> "Support for the Linux kernel has been primarily written to prove that it is trivial to support
new kernels. Without any prior exposure to Linux kernel programming, I have been able
to port the kernel stub in about three days: Two days were spent analyzing the parts of the
Linux kernel that are touched by the debugger. Another day was needed to do the actual
implementation. Someone more familiar with the inner workings of the Linux kernel would
most likely complete the port in a fraction of this time." [1]
@holgac that has nothing to do with OOP
@holgac citation needed on "leading to poor performance"
@PeterVaro yeah but this was a reply to higher level. And it was a reply to the message you sent about OOP helping going higher level
@holgac and it's slow as hell, comparing :(
@Kamiccolo TBH, kernels are really specific anyway. Most of software in the world isn't kernels.
23:39
@holgac well, it is probably my fault then, I did not want to "send" that message.. some design decision can have overheads, sure, think about getters and setters for example, BUT they are bringing new things to the table: opaqueness and safety
@BartekBanachewicz concrete example was on Linux kernel. You asked for the quote. So, here it is. In fact, it's project concentrated on software debugging.
that's why I said, everything is a multiblade swoird, like the time-space complexity: one data type has faster lookup, while the other has faster add/remove functionality
@Kamiccolo Can we now compare that to another OOP codebase? My asking for a quote was a rhetoric.
the exact same thing goes invoking an object's members/properties directly or through getters and setters
@BartekBanachewicz is this also rhetoric?
23:41
but ofc these are just examples, my point is => higher level does not mean poor performance, although it can mean that, but in those cases in a well designed object, it is there for a reason (like safety for example)
@Kamiccolo Dunno where you're getting with this.
anyway, I think this discussion has no real goal: 1) we should talk about an exact example, so we could decide wether OOP is needed or not 2) you should learn and practice OOP a lot, before we can get into details/comparing
SUM: wether you should use some design, practice or concept is entirely depending on the exact task or situation
(without that we are just shooting in the air, repeating buzzwords and fancy terms..)
@PeterVaro so, like 90% of OOP discussions
exactly, but no one said otherwise anyway. I had two points in the whole conversation:
1- I've worked with some projects developed in OOP and iterative languages, and I found OOP projects are harder and slower to understand
2- OOP provides many ways to overengineer a project, while it's somewhat harder to overengineer in iterative languages
23:51
anyway, I call it a night guys, have fun
free all;
haha :D
good night, @PeterVaro :}
And to be honest @BartekBanachewicz, I find your tone similar to this:
"I think it's easier to X than Y"
"That's because you have no experience in Y"
It kinda shows.
What am I to say? That you're ignoring a lot of research being done on programming practices? That OOP has been done over and over for the last 20 years and now we're moving on to Functional Programming anyway?
But how can we talk about functional programming if you're still stuck at thinking that "tying data and functionality isn't separation".
@BartekBanachewicz so if I didn't ignore those research, I'd find OOP projects easier to understand? :)
meh, I'm of to bed as well, it's 1am here
23:58
@holgac Perhaps. "OOP" as it stands has been reevaluated as a term over and over again
We've moved through "class-based OOP" and inheritance chains through prototypal mechanisms, through message-passing smalltalk-like objects, through pythonish mixins, through IOC containers...
There's like 1000 and 1 ways to do OOP.
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