Monday, March 12, 2007

Never ever never ever...

No kidding. Never ever do that. Never. Ever. Seriously. Again, no kidding.

Big NO-NO.

BAD. REAL bad. Don't do that.

Ok, it may be good for a team or a company, but this is not good for you. Yes. No kidding.

NEVER OWN A PIECE THAT HOSTS EVERYBODY ELSE'S CODE.

I did. And I tel you, do not do that. Really.

Let's imagine you own a Windows service, like NT service. And it has a mechanism to host code of everybody else in the team. Guess, what comes next?

So, every idiot puts BAD code inside, and then -- naturally -- it breaks. If you work in a good company (like I do now), testers start to scream. Otherwise - customers, which is even worse. Anyway, somebody screams, and guess, what do they scream?

"YOUR service BROKE!!!!"

It's ridiculous how much of modern software development career is about visibility and how little of it is about really doing the stuff. In a few months you train testers to look into the logs and file the bugs against those, who created the problem. Yes, they are in the logs. Clearly. Black on white. Like "XXX.c line YY access violation...", and you look into version control and see the name of the guy, who last changed XXX.c. Easy, right? Not for those crying "Your service broke!!!"

Anyway, in the end, every bug is YOURS and every fix is THEIRS.

I'd love to ignore this, in fact, I tried it, well.... it DOES NOT WORK.

Don't do that. Let others pick their own crap.

Really.

No kidding.

Well, maybe at some other company in some better time... like another universe... but not now.

Do yourself a favor.