Since both of these things are entirely perception-based (we have no hard "metrics" for what is good food or good code), it is interesting to see how beliefs like this diverge.
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This is a great analogy. I will have to use this when referring to code. I will say most of my projects that have these sprawls of libraries have sprawls off concerns. It is hard to even integrate all the regulations or projects we interface with
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Someone suggested "lasagne code" as the new "spaghetti code".
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Usually justified by saying "don't reinvent the wheel." It doesn't matter if the wheel involved is square and deflated.
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The ingredients themselves are usually pretty complex in their raw form. We just abstract that down to "onion" or "lamb shank".
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Do they really though? Things like browsers may be regarded as "good", but not "good code" because everybody knows it's full of bloat and redundancy that just happens to be getting the job done for now.
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Pretty sure that code as described is "good" in the same way that government is "good." No one actively likes the job that's being done, but tearing things down doesn't really carry a whole lot of desirable benefits either.
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Lowly Android dev here. I joined a team and the app literally has ~100 third-party dependencies I'm tasked to audit. A fun error is "Compilation failed in 421 seconds".
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How do you manage 3rd party licenses at that scale?
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