68 lines
3.3 KiB
YAML
68 lines
3.3 KiB
YAML
uuid:
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- value: '2025-05-11T09:00:07+00:00'
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target_uuid: b8966985-d4b2-42a7-a319-2e94ccfbb849
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title:
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- value: 'Diagram-driven development'
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created:
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- value: '2024-09-04T00:00:00+00:00'
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- value: '2025-05-11T09:00:07+00:00'
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- alias: /daily/2024/09/04/diagram-driven-development
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body:
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- value: |
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<p>You've heard of README-driven development, where you start by writing a README and documenting what you're going to code you start coding.</p>
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<p>I've recently been doing diagram-driven development, where I start with a diagram and build a flow chart of the functionality, what pieces I'll need and what the information flow or user journey looks like.</p>
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<p><a href="/daily/2024/08/18/mermaid-markdown-for-charts">I've been using Mermaid</a>, so the diagrams are easy and quick to create, are version-controlled and a stored in the same code repository.</p>
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<p>You can see an example in the <a href="https://github.com/opdavies/build-configs/tree/f02fce7ff5b5cff202ec8b893a4b3c7e7c56f3c4/docs">Build Configs repository</a>, which is <a href="/daily/2024/08/27/build-configs-is-open-source">now public and open-source</a>.</p>
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<p>Similar to writing the README first, creating a diagram upfront helps me clarify what I'm going to build and how I'm going to do it.</p>
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<p>And using Mermaid means I can create it and push a temporary branch or create a pull or merge request to share it with colleagues to review before I start.</p>
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format: full_html
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processed: |
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<p>You've heard of README-driven development, where you start by writing a README and documenting what you're going to code you start coding.</p>
|
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|
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<p>I've recently been doing diagram-driven development, where I start with a diagram and build a flow chart of the functionality, what pieces I'll need and what the information flow or user journey looks like.</p>
|
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|
|
<p><a href="http://default/daily/2024/08/18/mermaid-markdown-for-charts">I've been using Mermaid</a>, so the diagrams are easy and quick to create, are version-controlled and a stored in the same code repository.</p>
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<p>You can see an example in the <a href="https://github.com/opdavies/build-configs/tree/f02fce7ff5b5cff202ec8b893a4b3c7e7c56f3c4/docs">Build Configs repository</a>, which is <a href="http://default/daily/2024/08/27/build-configs-is-open-source">now public and open-source</a>.</p>
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<p>Similar to writing the README first, creating a diagram upfront helps me clarify what I'm going to build and how I'm going to do it.</p>
|
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<p>And using Mermaid means I can create it and push a temporary branch or create a pull or merge request to share it with colleagues to review before I start.</p>
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