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<blockquote data-quote="Janx" data-source="post: 6691804" data-attributes="member: 8835"><p>um, modular style programming is what results in code-reuse, which is reduction of bloat.</p><p></p><p>copy-pasta is the spaghetti code you get from old procedural programmers who just copy blocks of code from one area over to another area, thus doubling the amount of code that does "the same thing"</p><p></p><p>Note, I use the term modular loosely, in the sense of a variety of languages support using multiple files to store common code, use of functions or objects that can be referenced from multiple code blocks, etc. As compared to writing the majority of your code in the single main() function as an extreme example.</p><p></p><p>Ultimately, many of the advances in programming style today can be ascribed to "how to organize the code." Some of those styles, like Onion Architecture can create a different kind of bloat as its rules for where to put stuff arbitrarily means making more structures and places than might actually be needed for a smaller problem.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Janx, post: 6691804, member: 8835"] um, modular style programming is what results in code-reuse, which is reduction of bloat. copy-pasta is the spaghetti code you get from old procedural programmers who just copy blocks of code from one area over to another area, thus doubling the amount of code that does "the same thing" Note, I use the term modular loosely, in the sense of a variety of languages support using multiple files to store common code, use of functions or objects that can be referenced from multiple code blocks, etc. As compared to writing the majority of your code in the single main() function as an extreme example. Ultimately, many of the advances in programming style today can be ascribed to "how to organize the code." Some of those styles, like Onion Architecture can create a different kind of bloat as its rules for where to put stuff arbitrarily means making more structures and places than might actually be needed for a smaller problem. [/QUOTE]
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