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How to actually ship software that actually works

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Do you think you have what it takes to ship great software? I’ll let you in on a secret: it’s not easy and takes a lot of effort—but it’s all skills that you can learn.

Cat jump

Here’s my checklist for getting software projects done, in a way that they actually ship and actually work well:

Learn how to design things for humans

It’s a skill like any other to learn: design things for humans. I don’t mean visual design (though that is part of it), I mean looking at a problem and figuring out how to create human-computer interactions that make people successful at solving the problems without having a hard time, instead of just defaulting to putting up yet another CRUD form with a few standard UI components that map to some database fields.

A good way to get started is to use other people’s software and take notes about tasks you’re trying to complete and what you actually need to do to complete them. In my email client, how many clicks do I have to make to reply to someone? How many labels do I need to read? How often do I need to switch between the mouse and keyboard? Does it help me in any way with common tasks (like “find all attachments from a specific person”)? (You’ll be surprised how hard it is to use software!).

Stick to a few languages. Master them.

If there’s a better solution in another language or environment only use it if gives you some really amazing advantage. It’s often not worth the extra effort to become proficient enough with yet another tool.

Don’t underestimate what it means for a production environments: things have to be provisioned, deployed, security-patched and monitored.

Don’t follow the hype

Use what works for you. If you’re productive in PHP, by all means, use PHP. Of course, sometimes technologies come along that actually measurably increase productivity or have other huge advantages, but it can’t be overstated how few and far between those are—perhaps one or two happen in a decade.

Additionally, don’t step into the trap of believing that because there’s many variations of a specific technology that the underlying idea is a good one. It might actually be a sign of people trying in vain to find a technological solution for the wrong high-level approach.

For example, client-side MVC, for almost any type of web application functionality, will add programming overhead (because there’s more layers and those require interfaces between them), lessen productivity (more code to write and the layers make debugging harder) and likely not actually improve the experience for users (user interface design is hard work and using client-side MVC will not magically do it for you).

Stick to a style

Just like languages, frameworks and libraries, the way you use a language seems to change like seasons. One month it’s put it all in closures and the next month your hear that closures are so passé. Reduce cognitive stress while coding and debugging so you have more time thinking about the actual problem you want to solve.

Implement that minimum viable solution

It can’t be said often enough: when writing code, don’t write anything that the code doesn’t absolutely need in order to work. Don’t anticipate how you may extend the code in the future. It never turns out that way anyway. Concentrate on code that works, and write tests instead of wasting time on too much abstraction.

Don’t forget: code is not written in stone. It’s easy to refactor or rewrite later when you do need to change or extend it and when you actually know the requirements.

Avoid complexity

For example, I don’t use CSS or HTML preprocessors like HAML or Sass (if they work for you, awesome, please use it and be productive!)—my style of coding and refining apps involves a lot of tinkering and I have an easier time if I can mess with these things on a low level (for example, just copying and pasting styles I messed with in browser development tools into a CSS file directly).

And while I like CoffeeScript a lot, I find it easier to just write JavaScript directly. The gains of slightly cleaner syntax and better language features are not enough for me to deal with extra compilation steps, more complicated development setups and debugging issues.

Coding > Configuration

Avoid pre-fabricated solutions that only solve your problem the first 80%. You’re a programmer, not a configurator.

Try tracking your time doing various jobs while programming, from thinking about how to implement a specific feature, writing outlines and todo-lists for implementation, picking tools and libraries and making prototypes with them over actual implementation, writing tests and iterating over functionality and bugs.

You’d be surprised how little time you actually spend coding versus how much time can go into picking libraries. You might save a lot of time by just sitting down and writing code from scratch instead.

Never stop learning

Perhaps the best way to stay sharp is to occasionally do side projects, open source and perhaps micro-libraries. Experiment and tinker, so you don’t lose the joy of creating things out of nothing.

What helps you write great software? Hit me up on Twitter and discuss!


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