Haskel & Grivak
Haskel Haskel
You ever think about how a well‑optimized piece of code could be a better shield than any steel wall?
Grivak Grivak
Sure, if the code’s so tight it can predict every hit, it might be a better shield than a rusted steel wall. But I’d still stack a real wall in front of my eyes before trusting a few lines of script.
Haskel Haskel
You trust the code until it cracks, but a wall doesn’t require a patching schedule. Keep both, but don’t let the wall be a fallback for sloppy logic.
Grivak Grivak
Got it. I keep the wall, but the code gets the real guard. No sloppy patches, no excuses. If it breaks, I fix it or replace it before it trips the next enemy. Keep both, but don't treat the wall as a lazy safety net.
Haskel Haskel
Nice. Just remember the wall is only solid if you keep its joints in check, just like your code needs continuous tests and refactoring.
Grivak Grivak
Yeah, I keep an eye on both. Joints tighten, tests run, refactors happen—no room for slack. If either thing starts to crumble, I’ll patch it before it hurts.
Haskel Haskel
Great, just remember that a refactor that introduces subtle edge‑case regressions is just another kind of bug masquerading as improvement, so keep the tests as your moral compass.
Grivak Grivak
True, a slick refactor that only hides the mess is just another trick. Tests are my moral compass, so I keep them tight and run them before the code leaves the trench.
Haskel Haskel
Solid. Just don't let the tests grow lazy and think their coverage is a final judgment.