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by tomlagier 1952 days ago
I think a trap that many software engineers fall into is interpreting "loose coupling" as "build things as far down the binding hierarchy as possible".

You see this under various guises in the web world - "event-driven", "microservices", "dependency injection", "module pattern". It's a very easy thing to see the appeal of, and seems to check a lot of "good architecture" boxes. There are a lot of upsides too - scaling, encapsulation, testability, modular updates.

Unfortunately, it also incurs a very high and non-obvious cost - that it's much more difficult to properly trace events through the system. Reasoning through any of these decoupled patterns frequently takes specialized constructs - additional debugging views, logging, or special instances with known state.

It is for this reason that I argue that lower-hierarchy bindings should be viewed with skepticism - if you _cannot_ manage to solve a problem with tight coupling, then resort to a looser coupling. Introduce a loose coupling when there is measurable downside to maintaining a tighter coupling. Even then, choose the next step down the heirarchy (i.e. a new file, class, or module rather than a new service or pubsub system).

Here, as everywhere, it is a tradeoff about how understandable versus flexible you build a system. I think it is very easy to lean towards flexibility to the detriment of progress.