5. Human-Centered Design For Developers

One thing I love about design principles (like SOLID, YAGNI, or SoC) is that they become engrained into your professional way of ensuring a baseline of good structural code quality.

If you've ever run a situation where you weren't sure if you were doing things correctly, design principles sit in the back of your mind like a voice of reason.

Rules are shortcuts to principles. In this book, we present a number of rules, but only as an easier way to remember how to implement the underlying principles. As we get better over time, we'll feel a lot more confident breaking the rules. This comes when we know what the implications of breaking them are, and what we need to do to pull the code back into best practice

Howdy 👋

This is an online wiki about the main topics over the last 40 years of software design, architecture & testing. It was created by Khalil Stemmler.

This wiki's mission is to help eliminate the unknown unknowns, helping you get up to speed on the best practices and principles to write testable, flexible, and maintainable code.

I created this wiki while I was connecting the dots on my own path. You can read more about that learning journey in the introduction

Already bought it?

If you’ve already purchased the book, click here to re-send your link. You can read the online wiki or download a copy of the book in PDF, EPUB, and Kindle versions.

Want access?

You can read the intro to the book for free and visit solidbook.io to buy the book/wiki! To get an idea of my writing, read some of my best free content here and here.

Need help?

Something not working? Have a question? You can reach me on at khalil@khalilstemmler.com.