text
stringlengths
0
1.82k
[1132.76 --> 1132.90] Well,
[1133.12 --> 1133.34] yeah,
[1133.38 --> 1133.94] you're going to need
[1133.94 --> 1136.12] to talk to some database
[1136.12 --> 1137.16] and yeah,
[1137.22 --> 1137.68] you could generate
[1137.68 --> 1138.38] code to do that.
[1139.10 --> 1139.74] So I think
[1139.74 --> 1141.26] that has been,
[1141.26 --> 1141.50] you know,
[1141.50 --> 1142.70] very interesting
[1142.70 --> 1144.18] because I hadn't
[1144.18 --> 1144.82] thought about it
[1144.82 --> 1145.88] and it just makes
[1145.88 --> 1146.40] a lot of sense
[1146.40 --> 1146.78] and I think
[1146.78 --> 1147.30] it's very useful.
[1147.80 --> 1149.00] So I guess
[1149.00 --> 1149.60] it's kind of hard
[1149.60 --> 1150.70] to go into detail
[1150.70 --> 1153.60] about the actual DSL itself
[1153.60 --> 1154.94] because this is
[1154.94 --> 1156.28] all audio based.
[1157.02 --> 1157.26] I mean,
[1157.28 --> 1157.90] we could draw stuff
[1157.90 --> 1158.34] on our own
[1158.34 --> 1159.22] individual whiteboards
[1159.22 --> 1159.94] if we wanted to,
[1160.04 --> 1160.46] but I don't think
[1160.46 --> 1161.46] somehow that's going
[1161.46 --> 1162.08] to help the listeners.
[1162.74 --> 1163.94] So one thing
[1163.94 --> 1164.72] I would like to talk
[1164.72 --> 1165.16] about though
[1165.16 --> 1166.82] is not everybody's
[1166.82 --> 1167.36] kind of familiar
[1167.36 --> 1168.36] with code generation.
[1168.78 --> 1170.14] So I guess
[1170.14 --> 1171.60] one thought process
[1171.60 --> 1172.40] that constantly
[1172.40 --> 1173.20] comes across people
[1173.20 --> 1173.90] when they first hear
[1173.90 --> 1174.70] the idea is
[1174.70 --> 1175.80] how do you maintain
[1175.80 --> 1176.76] generated code,
[1176.84 --> 1176.98] right?
[1177.02 --> 1177.62] Like if you were
[1177.62 --> 1178.50] to modify it
[1178.50 --> 1179.20] and you need
[1179.20 --> 1180.12] to regenerate,
[1180.28 --> 1180.46] you know,
[1180.50 --> 1181.12] are you wiping
[1181.12 --> 1181.92] over all the top
[1181.92 --> 1182.50] of your stuff?
[1183.00 --> 1183.98] So I'd love to kind
[1183.98 --> 1185.16] of hear you explain
[1185.16 --> 1185.66] kind of like
[1185.66 --> 1186.34] what the model
[1186.34 --> 1187.62] is for maintaining
[1187.62 --> 1188.12] your code
[1188.12 --> 1188.90] that's been generated
[1188.90 --> 1190.80] and if I got
[1190.80 --> 1191.36] a new version
[1191.36 --> 1191.88] of Goa
[1191.88 --> 1193.08] and wanted to
[1193.08 --> 1193.68] take advantage
[1193.68 --> 1194.52] of some new features
[1194.52 --> 1195.04] or plugins,
[1195.54 --> 1196.14] what does that look
[1196.14 --> 1196.84] like for the code
[1196.84 --> 1197.80] that I had to manually
[1197.80 --> 1198.70] write as part
[1198.70 --> 1199.96] of that API?
[1201.04 --> 1201.14] Right.
[1201.26 --> 1202.84] So the main idea
[1202.84 --> 1203.60] is you don't.
[1203.88 --> 1205.24] You do not maintain
[1205.24 --> 1205.86] generated code.
[1206.44 --> 1206.74] Basically,
[1206.96 --> 1207.32] you know,
[1207.38 --> 1208.02] the generated code
[1208.02 --> 1209.58] is generated
[1209.58 --> 1210.80] in its own package
[1210.80 --> 1211.86] and you,
[1212.66 --> 1213.82] it's cheap code.
[1214.00 --> 1214.44] You don't have
[1214.44 --> 1215.02] to maintain it.
[1215.08 --> 1215.38] You don't have
[1215.38 --> 1216.04] to test it.
[1216.20 --> 1216.64] You don't have
[1216.64 --> 1217.62] to really know
[1217.62 --> 1218.74] the internals of it.
[1218.80 --> 1219.32] You're welcome
[1219.32 --> 1219.96] to look at them
[1219.96 --> 1220.48] and hopefully
[1220.48 --> 1220.98] it's understandable
[1220.98 --> 1221.98] but you don't have to.
[1223.24 --> 1224.38] All you care about
[1224.38 --> 1225.38] is what it provides
[1225.38 --> 1225.80] to you