The correct marketing term is "Code Modernization".
There are a large number of companies in the Code Modernization
business.
They appear to offer automated "modernization" of code.
I would suggest going slowly toward automated modernization. I'm not
easily convinced that any automated tool can preserve what's
meaningful and ignore the parts which are quirks, bugs or legacy cruft
that needs to be disposed of.
Indeed, I'm rather sure that an automated modernization will actually
be deleterious.
Without some care, cruft from the legacy code could be canonized into
an incomprehensible "feature" in the modern implementation. This will
eventually become it's own weird legacy quirk.
It's often best to rethink and rewrite the essential parts of the
legacy. Why?
Rule One: Writing Software is Capturing Knowledge.
Consequence: Converting Software is Preserving Knowledge.
Knowledge is something that people use. As with modern Agile
software development, we need to focus on the connections among
people. We need to use code as part of the channels of communication.
Read the Agile
Manifesto: http://agilemanifesto.org
There are four principles:
- Individuals and interactions over processes and tools
- Working software over comprehensive documentation
- Customer collaboration over contract negotiation
- Responding to change over following a plan
A detailed investigation into the use cases of legacy software, the
unique knowledge encoded, and the quirks and cruft requires thinking
about who uses the software and what they expect.
Working software (i.e., readable code) is central. An automated
modernization that doesn't properly handle quirks and cruft may create
"working" software in the sense that it compiles. But software that
people can't read and understand doesn't "work" in the more global
sense of encoding captured knowledge.
Collaboration is defeated by automated modernization. The users
may have features they don't like or additional features they need.
Doing the functionality improvements side-by-side with code
modernization makes the most sense. Indeed, it often leads to a proper
rewrite, which is the best strategy.
It's difficult for users to envision new software that corrects
long-standing quirks. When an Agile process makes software available
incrementally (e.g., the release cycle of Scrum), then the users learn
what they should have requested. An automated modernization cannot
easily respond to the way that users learn through each release.
your post is a good and your information easily un...
olive<noreply@blogger.com>
2019-04-04 05:41:04.683000-04:00
your post is a good and your information easily understand every person but you not mention that how to install this software if you want to check the best rewrite and you want to Save your time and energy by using Article Rewriter then check my website Thanks!