By bloid
via infoworld.com
Published: Apr 19 2007 / 04:47
Banging out “quick and dirty” code just to finish a project remains an ill-advised way to incorporate dynamic languages into the enterprise development mix. Not only does such an approach give rise to maintenance headaches, but regulations such as Sarbanes-Oxley — not to mention the increasing importance of delivering secure apps — mean that enterprises can no longer afford to accept the risks that quick-fix coding creates. By taking a measured approach to matching dynamic languages to the right kinds of projects, IT can tap the unique expressiveness of dynamic languages to create clean, reliable, and reusable code — and thereby realize productivity benefits without compromising the integrity of the enterprise.



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