Hold on your horses. First off, I don't think object oriented is ALL bad. Some things naturally map to objects like user, node, menu, etc, what I am talking about is trying to fit everything into objects.
I don't think anyone can argue that object oriented is also equal to bloat. I need a user's name, I load a user object from a user ID which does a million queries or so. As Joe Armstrong, the inventor of Erlang put it: "The problem with object-oriented languages is they've got all this implicit environment that they carry around with them. You wanted a banana but what you got was a gorilla holding the banana and the entire jungle." When an addition application turns into two objects from the Integer class using the + method, and when some wise-ass architect wants you to objectify everything, it does get quite ridiculous. Of course not to mention the 10 times CPU and memory resources used to achieve it. Finally, I don't think many will disagree that when you start thinking about a problem and its solution, you don't start thinking objects. Would love to get the opinions, or better yet, the experience of people who've read others' code written functionally vs OOP. Again, we're not talking about small systems or lousily written ones, but large enterprise systems. I for one get driven crazy following classes, inheritance and finding that each variable is a new class somewhere that's an aggregate of 10 other classes that I have to understand to debug a simple problem. It could just be me of course :) -- Ashraf Amayreh CEO | O-Minds Cell. 962 78 8099997 Tel. 962 6 5655150 Fax. 962 6 5675150 Skype: aamayreh www.o-minds.com web development | web design user experience | branding design Connect with us on Twitter http://twitter.com/ominds Connect with us on LinkedIn http://www.linkedin.com/in/aamayreh
