16 MAY 2012 by ideonexus

 Atoms Form Compounds With Properties Very Different Than ...

Compounds formed by chemical attraction, possess new properties different from those of their component parts... chemists have long believed that the contrary took place in their combination. They thought, in fact, that the compounds possessed properties intermediate between those of their component parts; so that two bodies, very coloured, very sapid, or insapid, soluble or insoluble, fusible or infusible, fixed or volatile, assumed in chemical combination, a shade or colour, or taste, solub...
Folksonomies: history chemistry
Folksonomies: history chemistry
  1  notes

It was long thought in Chemistry that compounds exhibited traits partway between their component parts.

03 JAN 2011 by ideonexus

 ReFactoring: Kill Your Darlings

In software design, when you find yourself feeling particularly proud of a neat little bit of design or code, stop and ask yourself how someone who didn't give birth to it will regard it. If it turns out to be overwrought or too slick for the need, you should probably kill your darling and replace it with an ordinary solution that others can actually use, and not just marvel at. Darlings are sometimes characterized as being "ever so clever." For an example, the phrase "ever so clever" is ever...
Folksonomies: programming refactoring
Folksonomies: programming refactoring
 2  2  notes

A good principle in software design, related to egoless programming, where developers don't get personally attached to their code, making it easier to cut for more elegant solutions