> I think it's a dangerous philosophy for professional work. You know what happens to code that works? It ships.
It's worse than that this happens to code that appears to work.
But of course people who work on "prototypes" don't code for robustness, they code for "delivery time", then of course when you ship the prototype, the result is ugly..
It's worse than that this happens to code that appears to work. But of course people who work on "prototypes" don't code for robustness, they code for "delivery time", then of course when you ship the prototype, the result is ugly..