Refactoring: Improving the Design of Existing Code. Don Roberts, John Brant, Kent Beck, Martin Fowler, William Opdyke

Refactoring: Improving the Design of Existing Code


Refactoring.Improving.the.Design.of.Existing.Code.pdf
ISBN: 0201485672,9780201485677 | 468 pages | 12 Mb


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Refactoring: Improving the Design of Existing Code Don Roberts, John Brant, Kent Beck, Martin Fowler, William Opdyke
Publisher: Addison-Wesley Professional




Our job is to build effective software as rapidly as we can. Software developers are professionals. Fowler, Martin, Brant, John, Opdyke, William and Roberts, Don (1999): Refactoring: Improving the Design of Existing Code. [3, 4] In his book on refactoring . In my career, a very little portion of the projects I was involved with were based on new code. Facing an existing project, you sometimes get confronted with “code that smells”. According to Refactoring: Improving the Design of Existing Code (by Martin Fowler, Kent Beck, John Brant, William Opdyke, Don Roberts p.87), there are two ways to solve it. (ed.) (2001): Human-Computer Interaction in the New Millennium. My experience is that refactoring is a big ait to building software quickly. Most of them were based on existing code. For instance, RTL refactoring can be used to abstract and understand a design [6], prepare a design for other purposes such as validation or elastization [2], optimize a design for specific tools such as synthesis or to simply improve the design of existing code [3]. Refactoring is defined as a disciplined technique for restructuring an existing body of code, altering its internal structure without changing its external behavior.