+++ title = "Things I Learnt The Hard Way - Future Thinking is Future Trashing" date = 2019-06-21 [taxonomies] tags = ["books", "things i learnt", "design", "solution"] +++ When developers try to solve a problem, they sometimes try to find a way that will solve all the problems, including the ones that may appear in the future. Trying to solve the problems that will appear in the future comes with a hefty tax: future problems future will never come -- and, believe me, they will _never_ come -- and you'll end up either having to maintain a huge behemoth of code that will never be fully used or you'll end up rewriting the whole thing 'cause there is a shitton of unused stuff. Solve the problem you have right now. Then solve the next one. And the next one. At one point, you'll realize there is a pattern emerging from those solutions and _then_ you'll find your "solve everything". This pattern is the _abstraction_ you're looking for and _then_ you'll be able to solve it in a simple way. As Steve Jobs once said "You can't connect the dots looking forward, only backwards". {{ chapters(prev_chapter_link="/books/things-i-learnt/throw-away", prev_chapter_title="Be Ready To Throw Your Code Away", next_chapter_link="/books/things-i-learnt/boolean-parameters", next_chapter_title="Don't Use Booleans As Parameters") }}