Chaos Is Our Employer

Pablo
4 min readMar 23, 2019

Almost five years ago Peter Welch wrote his epic and sad-but-true essay Programming Sucks. I really love his writing and I find the article very interesting and mostly true, but it also contains what I consider a pretty common misconception:

Every programmer occasionally, when nobody’s home, turns off the lights, pours a glass of scotch, puts on some light German electronica, and opens up a file on their computer. It’s a different file for every programmer. Sometimes they wrote it, sometimes they found it and knew they had to save it. They read over the lines, and weep at their beauty, then the tears turn bitter as they remember the rest of the files and the inevitable collapse of all that is good and true in the world.

This file is Good Code. It has sensible and consistent names for functions and variables. It’s concise. It doesn’t do anything obviously stupid. It has never had to live in the wild, or answer to a sales team. It does exactly one, mundane, specific thing, and it does it well. It was written by a single person, and never touched by another. It reads like poetry written by someone over thirty.

I used to share that idealistic vision of our job: code can be something beautiful and poetic, and can take us to other worlds of perfection and simplicity, like a symphony that makes objects dance and magic happen by directing a choreography of data flowing along the methods.

But nobody really cares.

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Pablo

I’ve been into software engineering for the most part of my life so I have thought long and hard about it. Now I‘m just writing it down.