Talk:Blogs
From APIDesign
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--[http://www.piagw.com Mickey] 14:21, 8 April 2012 (CEST) | --[http://www.piagw.com Mickey] 14:21, 8 April 2012 (CEST) | ||
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+ | You are so awesome! I do not believe I've truly read through a single thing like that before. So wonderful to discover someone with a few genuine thoughts on this subject. Seriously.. thanks for starting this up. This website is something that is required on the web, someone with some originality! | ||
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+ | --[http://www.chickencoopforsale.com/ Windy] 02:28, 9 April 2012 (CEST) | ||
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Revision as of 00:28, 9 April 2012
Comments on Blogs
Contents |
Casper Bang said ...
Interesting question. My guess is that I never had problems following suggestions related to usage of exceptions provided by others. I used exceptions in many ways in my APIs and as far as I can tell they evolve like other classes. The other area is usage of exceptions in own method definitions and here one needs to optimize for the understanding of users of the API. That is vague statement, but I do not have any practical advices ready now. I'll think about it in future. Thanks for your comment.
--JaroslavTulach 14:48, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
"yet it seems that there is no language in the world that would make this easy" Is this really a language problem? I think it's a tool and communication problem. You want a tool that communicates to you that the change you're about to make will result in incompatibilities with your previous consumers. We can even imagine that they could be notified that you are doing this, which might permit them to notify their own consumers in some way. The gnarliest problem here is illustrated in this scenario- imagine you used this tool and it notified the distributed developers and happily enough they all got the memo. How are they supposed to communicate anything so technical as "you can't download the latest version of such and such library because your program that you bought from us (remember us?) will stop working properly".
A lot of interesting programming problems aren't really programming problems, they're user interface problems. Almost all of the API book is an attempt to deal with limitations on our ability to process information. The reason that's germane is because a lot of problems that have information processing limitations as their root cause, as opposed to say limitations in our ability to measure the position of a particle or limitations in the strength of materials, can be dealt with through the magic of user interface engineering.
Continued on.... <a href="http://lambda-the-ultimate.org/node/2950"> Lambda the Ultimate </a>
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Mickey said ...
I'm gone to say to my little brother, that he should also visit this website on regular basis to get updated from latest news update.
--Mickey 14:21, 8 April 2012 (CEST)
Windy said ...
You are so awesome! I do not believe I've truly read through a single thing like that before. So wonderful to discover someone with a few genuine thoughts on this subject. Seriously.. thanks for starting this up. This website is something that is required on the web, someone with some originality!
--Windy 02:28, 9 April 2012 (CEST)
I was curious as to know how come, in a book strictly about API design in Java, you do not mention exceptions (particular checked exceptions) and the role they play in documenting assertions vs. hampering versionability. Did you simply think this to be too controversial an issue I wonder?
--Casper Bang 05:17, 5 September 2008 (CEST)