|
|
|
|
|
by farley13
118 days ago
|
|
I know magic has a nice Arthur C. Clarke ring to it, but I think arguing about magic obscures the actual argument. It's about layers of abstraction, the need to understand them, modify them, know what is leaking etc. I think people sometimes substitute magic when they mean "I suddenly need to learn a lower layer I assumed was much less complex ". I don't think anyone is calling the linux kernal magic. Everyone assumes it's complex. Another use of "magic" is when you find yourself debugging a lower layer because the abstraction breaks in some way. If it's highly abstracted and the inner loop gives you few starting points ( while (???) pickupWorkFromAnyWhere() )). It can feel kafkaesque. I sleep just fine not knowing how much software I use exactly works. It's the layers closest to application code that I wish were more friendly to the casual debugger. |
|