i try to see beyond any initial repulsion to weird looking code because i know that it may be super functional. but it got me thinking: what makes code beautiful? what makes code "high quality"? (other than that it results in a working, performant, and robust software program obviously).
so i'm curious -- can you show me the best code you've encountered? it can be a small snippet or it can be a "slice of a library" or an architecture etc. have you written anything yourself that you are super proud of?
EDIT: I think what made that code so good is that there was absolutely nothing unnecessary in the whole system. Every variable, every function, every class was absolutely necessary to deliver the required functionality or to ensure some technical constraint was respected. Everything in that system belonged, and nothing didn't.
src/os/win32/ngx_alloc.c
src/os/unix/ngx_alloc.c
---A few years later I stumbled upon this refactoring video by Uncle Bob and that was my second aha! moment.
https://web.archive.org/web/20150905163826/https://www.youtu...
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Many people here recommend Redis as an inspiring example.
Messages are queued through an API, captured by Debezium, produced to Kafka, delivered by workers, logged, and updated through DSNs received via webhook. Failures go to a DLQ where they are retried until the limit is reached.
Each stage runs independently, so any failure only causes minor delay without risking unintended drops. With Prometheus metrics in place, this system has processed more than two hundred thousand messages per day in production for two years without a single reported loss.
It is a balance. And legibility is a fuzzy attribute that depends on the intellectual capacity of the collective observer.
But, beauty is subjective.. some people think maximally terse code is beautiful so... shrug
Best I’ve seen is probably the Golang arm64 NEON asm implementation of maphash using AES before the 1.24 update.