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Get Your Hands Dirty on Clean Architecture

Get Your Hands Dirty on Clean Architecture

By : Tom Hombergs
4.5 (24)
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Get Your Hands Dirty on Clean Architecture

Get Your Hands Dirty on Clean Architecture

4.5 (24)
By: Tom Hombergs

Overview of this book

Building for maintainability is key to keep development costs low (and developers happy). The second edition of "Get Your Hands Dirty on Clean Architecture" is here to equip you with the essential skills and knowledge to build maintainable software. Building upon the success of the first edition, this comprehensive guide explores the drawbacks of conventional layered architecture and highlights the advantages of domain-centric styles such as Robert C. Martin's Clean Architecture and Alistair Cockburn's Hexagonal Architecture. Then, the book dives into hands-on chapters that show you how to manifest a Hexagonal Architecture in actual code. You'll learn in detail about different mapping strategies between the layers of a Hexagonal Architecture and see how to assemble the architecture elements into an application. The later chapters demonstrate how to enforce architecture boundaries, what shortcuts produce what types of technical debt, and how, sometimes, it is a good idea to willingly take on those debts. By the end of this second edition, you'll be armed with a deep understanding of the Hexagonal Architecture style and be ready to create maintainable web applications that save money and time. Whether you're a seasoned developer or a newcomer to the field, "Get Your Hands Dirty on Clean Architecture" will empower you to take your software architecture skills to new heights and build applications that stand the test of time.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
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The responsibility of starting clean

While working with code doesn’t really feel like looting a car, we all are unconsciously subject to the Broken Windows psychology. This makes it important to start a project clean, with as few shortcuts and as little technical debt as possible. This is because, as soon as a shortcut creeps in, it acts as a broken window and attracts more shortcuts.

Since a software project often is a very expensive and long-running endeavor, keeping broken windows at bay is a huge responsibility for us as software developers. We may not even be the ones finishing the project and others have to take over. For them, it’s a legacy code base they don’t have a connection to yet, lowering the threshold for creating broken windows even further.

There are times, however, when we decide a shortcut is the pragmatic thing to do, be it because the part of the code we’re working on is not that important to the project as a whole, because we...

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