Book Image

Software Architecture with Python

By : Anand Balachandran Pillai
Book Image

Software Architecture with Python

By: Anand Balachandran Pillai

Overview of this book

This book starts by explaining how Python fits into an application's architecture. As you move along, you will get to grips with architecturally significant demands and how to determine them. Later, you’ll gain a complete understanding of the different architectural quality requirements for building a product that satisfies business needs, such as maintainability/reusability, testability, scalability, performance, usability, and security. You will also use various techniques such as incorporating DevOps, continuous integration, and more to make your application robust. You will discover when and when not to use object orientation in your applications, and design scalable applications. The focus is on building the business logic based on the business process documentation, and understanding which frameworks to use and when to use them. The book also covers some important patterns that should be taken into account while solving design problems, as well as those in relatively new domains such as the Cloud. By the end of this book, you will have understood the ins and outs of Python so that you can make critical design decisions that not just live up to but also surpassyour clients’ expectations.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Software Architecture with Python
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface
Index

Understanding readability


The readability of a software system is closely tied to its modifiability. Well-written, well-documented code, keeping up with standard or adopted practices for the programming language, tends to produce simple, concise code that is easy to read and modify.

Readability is not only related to the aspect of following good coding guidelines, but it also ties up to how clear the logic is, how much the code uses standard features of the language, how modular the functions are, and so on.

In fact, we can summarize the different aspects of readability as follows:

  • Well-written: A piece of code is well-written if it uses simple syntax, uses well-known features and idioms of the language, the logic is clear and concise, and if it uses variables, functions, and class/module names meaningfully; that is, they express what they do.

  • Well-documented: Documentation usually refers to the inline comments in the code. A well-documented piece of code tells what it does, what its input...