Ad Hoc Development vs Evidence-Based Practice
Developers might use ad hoc development in emergency situations, such as fixing critical bugs under tight deadlines, prototyping ideas rapidly, or handling one-off tasks that don't justify a full development cycle meets developers should learn and use evidence-based practice to make informed decisions about technologies, architectures, and processes, especially in complex or high-stakes projects where poor choices can lead to failures or inefficiencies. Here's our take.
Ad Hoc Development
Developers might use ad hoc development in emergency situations, such as fixing critical bugs under tight deadlines, prototyping ideas rapidly, or handling one-off tasks that don't justify a full development cycle
Ad Hoc Development
Nice PickDevelopers might use ad hoc development in emergency situations, such as fixing critical bugs under tight deadlines, prototyping ideas rapidly, or handling one-off tasks that don't justify a full development cycle
Pros
- +It's useful for quick problem-solving in environments like startups, hackathons, or when dealing with legacy systems where formal processes are impractical
- +Related to: rapid-prototyping, debugging
Cons
- -Specific tradeoffs depend on your use case
Evidence-Based Practice
Developers should learn and use Evidence-Based Practice to make informed decisions about technologies, architectures, and processes, especially in complex or high-stakes projects where poor choices can lead to failures or inefficiencies
Pros
- +It is particularly valuable in contexts like healthcare software, financial systems, or large-scale enterprise applications, where reliability and performance are critical, and in agile or DevOps environments to optimize workflows based on data-driven insights
- +Related to: agile-methodology, devops
Cons
- -Specific tradeoffs depend on your use case
The Verdict
Use Ad Hoc Development if: You want it's useful for quick problem-solving in environments like startups, hackathons, or when dealing with legacy systems where formal processes are impractical and can live with specific tradeoffs depend on your use case.
Use Evidence-Based Practice if: You prioritize it is particularly valuable in contexts like healthcare software, financial systems, or large-scale enterprise applications, where reliability and performance are critical, and in agile or devops environments to optimize workflows based on data-driven insights over what Ad Hoc Development offers.
Developers might use ad hoc development in emergency situations, such as fixing critical bugs under tight deadlines, prototyping ideas rapidly, or handling one-off tasks that don't justify a full development cycle
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