Sounds like you have a problem with anal retention.
When I first started in programming (1977), we had to create *complete* technical design
documents before a single line of code was written. This included technical specs, data
diagrams, flowcharts, screen shots, etc...
About 6 weeks ago, I was evaluating a fairly complex software project and and asked the
engineer to provide a flowchart of how the application worked. He stated that he
didn't see the value of a flowchart and that it would slow down the development
process. In his opinion, it was much easier to just read the code.
I was tempted to kick his ass, but decided the best way to handle this was to prove the
value of proper documentation. So, I waded through his code, found the most complex
module, and created a comprehensive flowchart of just that module.
Now the fun part... I got the engineer, his supervisor, our VP of technology, and another
non-technical co-worker (whom had never seen the project) together for a quick quiz. I
gave the flowchart to the non-technical person and started asking the group fundimental
questions like; "how many parameters are passed to and from the module",
"what happens if an out-of-bounds value is passed", "what is the exact
sequence of events when..." blah, blah, blah. Almost instantly, the non-technical
person was able to answer the questions while the two engineers waded through hundreds of
lines of code.
Within 30 minutes, I was able to totally embarrass the engineer *and* his supervisor in
front of the VP.
Shoulda kicked his ass anyway... ;-)
Steve Robertson <steverob(a)hotoffice.com>