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Epilogue: Moving On

    Computing

    Program Design

    Onward, Developers and Computer Scientists

    Onward, Accountants, Journalists, Surgeons, and Everyone Else

You have reached the end of this introduction to computing and programming, or program design, as we say here. While there is more to learn about both subjects, this is a good point to stop, summarize, and look ahead.

Computing

In elementary school, you learned to calculate with numbers. At first, you used numbers to count real things: three apples, five friends, twelve bagels. A bit later, you encountered addition, subtraction, multiplication, and even division; then came fractions. Eventually, you found out about variables and functions, which your teachers called algebra. Variables represented numbers, and functions related numbers to numbers.

Because you used numbers throughout this process, you didn’t think much of numbers as a means to represent information about the real world. Yes, you had started with three bears, five wolves, and twelve horses; but by high school, nobody reminded you of this relationship.

When you move from mathematical calculations to computing, the step from information to data and back becomes central. Nowadays, programs process representations of music, videos, molecules, chemical compounds, business case studies, electrical diagrams, and blueprints. Fortunately, you don’t need to encode all this information with numbers or, worse, just 0 and 1; if you had to, life would be unimaginably tedious. Instead, computing generalizes arithmetic and algebra so that when you program, you can code—and your programs can compute—with strings, Booleans, characters, structures, lists, functions, and many more kinds of data.

Classes of data and their functions come with equational laws that explain their meaning, just like the laws for numbers and their functions. While these equational laws are as simple as “(+ 1 1) evaluates to 2” and “(not #true) equals #false,” you can use them to predict the behavior of entire programs. When you run a program, you actually just apply one of its many functions, an act that you can explain with the beta rule first mentioned in Intermezzo 1: Beginning Student Language. Once the variables are replaced with values, the laws of data take over until you have either only a value or another function application. But yes, that’s all there is to computing.

Program Design

A typical software development project requires the collaboration of many programmers, and the result consists of thousands of functions. Over the life span of such a project, programmers come and go. Hence, the design structure of programs is really a means of communication among programmers across time. When you approach code that someone else wrote some time ago, the program ought to express its purpose and its relationships to other pieces—because that other person might not be around anymore.

In such a dynamic context, programmers must create programs in a disciplined manner if they wish to work reasonable numbers of hours or produce high-quality products. Following a systematic design method guarantees that the program organization is comprehensible. Others can then easily understand the pieces and the whole, and then fix bugs or add new pieces of functionality.

The design process of this book is one of these methods, and you ought to follow it whenever you create programs you might care about. You start with an analysis of the world of information and a description of the data that represents the information. Then you make a plan, a work list of functions needed. If this list is large, you refine the process in an iterative manner. You start with a subset of functions that quickly yields a product with which a client can interact. As you observe these interactions, you will quickly figure out which elements of your work list to tackle next.

Designing a program, or only a function, requires a rigorous understanding of what it computes. Unless you can describe the purpose of a piece of code with a concise statement, you cannot produce anything useful for future programmers. Make up, and work through, examples. Turn these examples into a suite of tests. This test suite is even more important when it comes to future modifications of the program. Anyone who changes the code can rerun these tests and reconfirm that the program still works for the basic examples.

Eventually your program will also fail. Other programmers may use it in an unanticipated manner. Real-world users may find differences between expected and actual behavior. Because you have designed the code in a systematic manner, you will know what to do. You will formulate a failing test case for your program’s main function. From this one test, you will derive a test case for each function that the main function mentions. Those functions that pass their new tests do not contribute to the failure. One of the others does; on occasion, several might collude to create a bug. If the broken function composes others, resume the test creation; otherwise you have found the source of the problem. You will know that you have fixed the problem when the program as a whole passes all its tests.

No matter how hard you work, a function or program isn’t done the first time it passes the test suite. You must find time to inspect it for design flaws and repetitions of designs. If you find any design patterns, form new abstractions or use existing abstractions to eliminate these patterns.

If you respect these guidelines, you will produce solid software with reasonable effort. It will work because you understand why and how it works. Others who must modify or enhance your software will understand it quickly because the code communicates its process and its purpose. Working through this book got you started. Now you must practice, practice, practice. And you will have to learn a lot more about program design and computing than a first book can teach.

Onward, Developers and Computer Scientists

Right now, you might be wondering what to study next. The answer is both more programming and more computing.

As a student of program design, your next task is to learn how the design process applies in the setting of a full-fledged programming language. Some of these languages are like the teaching languages, and the transition will be easy. Others require a different mind-set because they offer means for spelling out data definitions (classes and objects) and for formulating signatures so that they are cross-checked before the program is run (types).Given your knowledge, it is easy for you to learn Racket, the language behind the teaching languages in this book. See Realm of Racket for one possible introduction. In addition, you will also have to learn how to scale the design process to the use and production of so-called frameworks (“stacks”) and components. Roughly speaking, frameworks abstract pieces of functionality—for example, graphical user interfaces, database connections, and web connectivity—that are common to many software systems. You need to learn to instantiate these abstractions, and your programs will compose these instances to create coherent systems. Similarly, learning to create new system components is also inherently a part of scaling up your skills.

As a student of computing, you will also have to expand your understanding of the computational process. This book has focused on the laws that describe the process itself. In order to function as a real software engineer, you need to learn what the process costs, at both a theoretical level and a practical one. Studying the concept of big-O in some more depth is a first, small step in this direction; learning to measure and analyze a program’s performance is the real goal because you will need this skill as a developer on a regular basis. Above and beyond these basic ideas, you will also need knowledge about hardware, networking, layering of software, and specialized algorithms in various disciplines.

Onward, Accountants, Journalists, Surgeons, and Everyone Else

Some of you wanted to see what computing and programming are all about. You now know that computing is merely a generalization of calculating, and you may sense how useful program design is to you. Even if you never develop programs again, you know what distinguishes a garage programmer from a serious software developer. When you interact with developers as a professional, you know that systematic design matters because it affects your quality of life and the bottom line of your business.

In reality, though, you are likely to “program” again, on a regular basis; you may just fail to see your activities in this light. Imagine a journalist for a moment. His story starts with the collection of information and data, laying it out, organizing it, and adding anecdotes. If you squint, you’ll see that this is only step one of the design process. Let’s turn to a family doctor who, after checking up on your symptoms, formulates a hypothesis of what might affect you. Do you see step two? Or, think of a lawyer who illustrates the point of an argument with a number of examples—an instance of step three. Finally, a civil engineer cross-checks the bridge as it is built to make sure it lives up to the blueprint and the underlying static calculations. Cross-checking is a form of testing—step six of the process; it compares actual measurements with expected values from the predictive calculations. Each of these professionals develops a system to work effectively and efficiently; and deep down, this system is likely to resemble the design process employed in this book.

Now, once you accept that many activities are a form of programming, you can transfer additional ideas from the design process to your own life. For example, if you recognize patterns, you may take the little additional time it takes to create an “abstraction”—a single point of control—to simplify your future work. So, regardless of whether you become an accountant or a doctor or something else, remember the design processes wherever you go and whatever you do.

Exercise Write a short essay on how the design process may help you with your chosen profession.