When electrical engineers design new printed circuit boards, they go to a catalog of available integrated circuits to select the most appropriate components. When architects design homes, they go to catalogs of prefabricated doors, windows, moldings, and other components. All this is called "engineering." Software engineers usually reinvent components over and over again; they rarely salvage existing software components. It is interesting that the software industry calls this rare practice "reuse" rather than "engineering."
Jerry Yoakum's thoughts on software engineering and architecture from experience working with code, computer science, python, java, APIs, NASA, data mining, math, etc.
Tuesday, April 25, 2017
Don't Reinvent the Wheel
When electrical engineers design new printed circuit boards, they go to a catalog of available integrated circuits to select the most appropriate components. When architects design homes, they go to catalogs of prefabricated doors, windows, moldings, and other components. All this is called "engineering." Software engineers usually reinvent components over and over again; they rarely salvage existing software components. It is interesting that the software industry calls this rare practice "reuse" rather than "engineering."
Labels:
architecture,
design,
Seattle,
software-engineering
Location:
Seattle, WA, USA