This was my attitude as well for much of my career, and it was a mistake. The "correct" decision depends on the state of the business and your resources at the time. And nothing else.
I don't know why you're getting downvoted. Tech debt is a tool and I think it's absolutely fair to put the needs of the business before documentation, or even code quality to a certain extent. As long as developers and management are aware that isn't free, and the cost must be repaid, I think it's the right decision in many cases.
Yes, I've worked mostly in money losing startups, but since I work in a $ billion-profit investment bank I saw the difference. It's better to waste money on technical debt crisis down the line than have no money to waste because of thousands of devs all being perfectionists locking each other.
Small startups seem to reach this stage eventually and in big companies, management is acutely aware of it, and breaks every attempt at correctness-over-business-rationality, under the teary cries of the autists, sometimes :D
I don't want to work for a company that puts its need above mine. That company isn't worth my energy.
The correct decision is to take an approach that involves producing quality code and documentation as you go.
If you don't have the time available to do that then you don't actually have the time to do that piece of work.
Doing so regardless, or becoming expeditors is the worst thing you can do for a company. It creates a race to the bottom which in turn creates a god awful place to work.
This feedback loop continues to worsen as you struggle to hire and struggle to retain.
throwaway3699|4 years ago
xwolfi|4 years ago
Small startups seem to reach this stage eventually and in big companies, management is acutely aware of it, and breaks every attempt at correctness-over-business-rationality, under the teary cries of the autists, sometimes :D
habibur|4 years ago
Too much perfectionist? You will enjoy the journey, but probably won't reach your destination.
waheoo|4 years ago
Til I realised it was a false dichotomy.
I don't want to work for a company that puts its need above mine. That company isn't worth my energy.
The correct decision is to take an approach that involves producing quality code and documentation as you go.
If you don't have the time available to do that then you don't actually have the time to do that piece of work.
Doing so regardless, or becoming expeditors is the worst thing you can do for a company. It creates a race to the bottom which in turn creates a god awful place to work.
This feedback loop continues to worsen as you struggle to hire and struggle to retain.
Eventually, you're fucking Comcast.