Schedule:
18:00 - Doors open
18:30 - Food (dinner)
19:30 - Talk
20:30 - Raffles, and announcements
20:45 - Social and drinks
Talk: Explicit Architecture
The Big Ball of Mud is the most serious problem I see in the majority of the code bases I look at.
But why do we keep falling into that trap?
What are the root problems behind it?
How can we avoid, escape, and stay out of it?
In this talk, you will learn about the architecture mental map (https://herbertograca.com/2017/11/16/explicit-architecture-01-ddd-hexagonal-onion-clean-cqrs-how-i-put-it-all-together) I use to answer these questions. We will briefly revisit a few established software development and architecture ideas and see how you can put them in your service, exemplifying with some bits of code and tooling, to help keep the mud out of your application.
The main topics of the talk are:
- The Big Ball of Mud problem
- Overview of DDD, Hexagonal, Onion, Screaming, Clean, CQRS
- How to organise the code base to reflect architecture boundaries
- How to enforce the architecture boundaries
Speaker: Herberto Graça
Herberto Graça is a senior software developer at Werkspot, in Amsterdam.
The first time he coded was in the late 1980s, on his cousin’s ZX Spectrum computer.
He graduated from University with a Bachelor in IT, plus a Specialisation in Teaching and a Masters in School Leadership and Management.
He had a half year experience as a JAVA developer, and worked as an IT teacher for eight years, while he also did some occasional freelance work before he decided to become a full-time software developer.
When he is not coding for work or in a pet project, he spends his time reading a book, riding his motorbike or writing about software development and software architecture on his blog.
His blog post series about software architecture counting 18 posts, has gotten some traction, especially his posts about how he puts several known architectural concepts together to make the architecture explicit in the codebase ‘DDD, Hexagonal, Onion, Clean, CQRS, … How I put it all together’ and ‘More than concentric layers’.
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