#4,571 in Computers & technology books
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Reddit mentions of Principle-Based Refactoring: Learning Software Design Principles by Applying Refactoring Rules
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Reddit mentions: 2
We found 2 Reddit mentions of Principle-Based Refactoring: Learning Software Design Principles by Applying Refactoring Rules. Here are the top ones.
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One of my favorite professors in college once got a contract to multithread a rats nest, because it wasn't performant enough.
He spent the first half of the allotted time refactoring it and building proper unit tests for it. The refactored version was much more (but presumably not purely) object oriented.
After he had refactored it, he had already hit all the performance targets they wanted, and he ended up never actually threading it.
Aside: he wrote a book on this. This book is published in 14 pt Verdana. (That's not a good typeface for printing a book in.)
My best professor from Neumont University wrote this one after our Software Design class. He didn't like how expensive all the text books were and he didn't like half of the things in the other books, so he wrote his own condensed version.