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Hi, passing time, the frontline of what is manageable on the fly increases, so probably for a seasoned programmer a 20.000 rows (just a guess) project is within, as for Rubinstein the Shumann notturno is within. But at the beginning, having a flattened perspective can be an obstacle. Let's say that you have "just" finished to read the 600 pages of Camel, Alpaca, etc, collection, that you see a 300 pages on XML, that you see on the right other 300 pages on DBI, and then, other 300 pages on the right of the right for PDL... But if there is not an invitation to model and plan from the beginning, to start managing complexity (500 rows can be complex at the beginning) you have just this list to start with, and no way to say what is within your current scope, and what is not. Fabio D'Alfonso 'Enabling Business Through IT' fax: +39.06.874.599.581 * Hidden numbers are automatically rejected by the phoneOn 5/3/2012 4:12 PM, Judd Taylor wrote: I use UML models to guide my development, but it's mostly because I'm now working solo on projects that are too big for one person to handle, and I need the diagrams and process to keep track of everything.I just use standard UML tools, however. Nothing special there. -Judd ____________________________ Judd Taylor Software Engineer Orbital Systems, Ltd. 3807 Carbon Rd. Irving, TX 75038-3415 [email protected] (972) 915-3669 x127 ________________________________________ From: Fabio D'Alfonso [[email protected]] Sent: Wednesday, May 02, 2012 5:41 PM To: [email protected] Subject: [Perldl] Modeling Languages & Perl Hi, I have a lot of literature about Perl and I see that up to advanced material potentially related to very large projects, there is not a single attempt (it seems) to leverage UML (or similar tools) to organize the job as a part of the learning. Perl is both fun and powerful, but the flattened landscape Perl , Regex, DBI, LWP, PDL, XML, and so on and on, can become to seem an enumeration not suggesting a process to determine a mapping (or more alternatives to choose in) between a goal and the resources available. Some people here manage large projects and could they tell their thinks on this? Thanks -- Fabio D'Alfonso 'Enabling Business Through IT' cell. +39.348.059.40.22 * web: http://www.fabiodalfonso.com email: [email protected] twitter: http://www.twitter.com/fabio_dalfonso linkedin: http://it.linkedin.com/in/fabiodalfonso fax: +39.06.874.599.581 BlackBerry® Wireless Enabled Address. * Hidden numbers are automatically rejected by the phone _______________________________________________ Perldl mailing list [email protected] http://mailman.jach.hawaii.edu/mailman/listinfo/perldl |
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