Postmodern Programming: How I Learned to Stop Programming and Love Scrapheap Software

by James Noble and Robert Biddle

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With hardly anyone realizing it, software development has fundamentally changed, in ways that parallel the broader cultural shift from "modernism" to "postmodernism." "Modern" applications include compilers; aircraft avionics; and nuclear power plant control software. Postmodern programs include computer games; viruses; aircraft personal entertainment systems; groupware for organizing protests for (and against) nuclear power plans; integrated supply chain management systems; and systems for finding the cheapest downloadable Paris Hilton video. Postmodern software doesn't just do different things: it is created and evolved in fundamentally different ways, with different tools. Exemplary "modern" software development technologies included Pascal, 7-bit ASCII, and Entity-Relationship Diagrams. Exemplary "postmodern" technologies include Perl, HTML, Google, and Wikipedia. Postmodern programming rejects overarching grand narratives: it is built up, following practice, rather than created top-down from theory. If you program, you need to understand this revolutionary shift. Postmodern Programming illuminates it, and reveals its implications for everyone who writes code -- or relies on it.

  • ISBN10 0321518659
  • ISBN13 9780321518651
  • Publish Date 28 October 2018
  • Publish Status Cancelled
  • Publish Country US
  • Publisher Pearson Education (US)
  • Imprint Addison-Wesley Educational Publishers Inc
  • Format Paperback
  • Pages 228
  • Language English