Yeah Spring is obviously deliberately obfuscated, which makes perfect sense considering the business model.
> If you find a bug with the adhoc framework you need to convince a busy person in another team to spend time to unblock you. Which is not so difficult, because that busy person is in the same organisation as you, and…
I started using a framework for a task at work, was immediately tripped up by an obvious stupid bug in the config files, reported it and it was closed because "too many people already depend on this behaviour". So now…
> 1. Every sufficiently complex framework-free application contains an ad hoc, informally-specified, bug-ridden, slow implementation of half of a framework. Of which you are the creator and expert, and have complete…
Yeah Spring is obviously deliberately obfuscated, which makes perfect sense considering the business model.
> If you find a bug with the adhoc framework you need to convince a busy person in another team to spend time to unblock you. Which is not so difficult, because that busy person is in the same organisation as you, and…
I started using a framework for a task at work, was immediately tripped up by an obvious stupid bug in the config files, reported it and it was closed because "too many people already depend on this behaviour". So now…
> 1. Every sufficiently complex framework-free application contains an ad hoc, informally-specified, bug-ridden, slow implementation of half of a framework. Of which you are the creator and expert, and have complete…