77 lines
2.9 KiB
YAML
77 lines
2.9 KiB
YAML
uuid:
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- value: 42e9e133-51d4-4a91-b132-413eece2278c
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langcode:
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- value: en
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type:
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target_uuid: 8bde1f2f-eef9-4f2d-ae9c-96921f8193d7
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revision_timestamp:
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- value: '2025-05-11T09:00:32+00:00'
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target_uuid: b8966985-d4b2-42a7-a319-2e94ccfbb849
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revision_log: { }
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uid:
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target_uuid: b8966985-d4b2-42a7-a319-2e94ccfbb849
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title:
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- value: |
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Verbosity over abstraction
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created:
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- value: '2023-09-06T00:00:00+00:00'
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changed:
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- value: '2025-05-11T09:00:32+00:00'
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- value: true
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path:
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- alias: /daily/2023/09/06/verbosity-over-abstraction
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langcode: en
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body:
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- value: |
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<p>Recently, a steamer said they "prefer verbosity over abstraction/confusion".</p>
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<p>In that scenario, it was regarding the name of a microservice they were creating. It was long and verbose, but it described what it did.</p>
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<p>It was clear to anyone working on that project what that service did, now and in the future.</p>
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<p>I prefer this to shorter, less-descriptive names.</p>
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<p>I hardly ever create a variable called <code>$x</code>, <code>$k</code> or <code>$v</code>. I only would if it was clear what it meant within its context.</p>
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<p>I like to write descriptive names for test methods that explain what the test is doing. Even if I start with a vague name, I'll refactor it to make it more specific and clearer.</p>
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<p>I prefer not to use PHP functions like <code>compact</code> and to write it out and avoid the abstraction and any confusion it could cause.</p>
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<p>I prefer code to be verbose, descriptive and easy to read, understand and change.</p>
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format: full_html
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processed: |
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<p>Recently, a steamer said they "prefer verbosity over abstraction/confusion".</p>
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<p>In that scenario, it was regarding the name of a microservice they were creating. It was long and verbose, but it described what it did.</p>
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<p>It was clear to anyone working on that project what that service did, now and in the future.</p>
|
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<p>I prefer this to shorter, less-descriptive names.</p>
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|
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<p>I hardly ever create a variable called <code>$x</code>, <code>$k</code> or <code>$v</code>. I only would if it was clear what it meant within its context.</p>
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<p>I like to write descriptive names for test methods that explain what the test is doing. Even if I start with a vague name, I'll refactor it to make it more specific and clearer.</p>
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<p>I prefer not to use PHP functions like <code>compact</code> and to write it out and avoid the abstraction and any confusion it could cause.</p>
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<p>I prefer code to be verbose, descriptive and easy to read, understand and change.</p>
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summary: null
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field_daily_email_cta: { }
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