Slide 1

Slide 1 text

Magenta The Art of Abstraction

Slide 2

Slide 2 text

No content

Slide 3

Slide 3 text

No content

Slide 4

Slide 4 text

No content

Slide 5

Slide 5 text

No content

Slide 6

Slide 6 text

“Anything that is in the world when you’re born is normal and ordinary and is just a natural part of the way the world works. ! Anything that's invented between when you’re fifteen and thirty-five is new and exciting and revolutionary and you can probably get a career in it. ! Anything invented after you're thirty-five is against the natural order of things” –Douglas Adams

Slide 7

Slide 7 text

Computer Science

Slide 8

Slide 8 text

Colour Perception

Slide 9

Slide 9 text

No content

Slide 10

Slide 10 text

Conclusion spoiler alert

Slide 11

Slide 11 text

Abstraction happens in our minds

Slide 12

Slide 12 text

Abstractions shape how we perceive things

Slide 13

Slide 13 text

Changing abstractions is a basic principle of innovation and progress

Slide 14

Slide 14 text

Abstraction is the basis of Computer Science

Slide 15

Slide 15 text

Abstraction is the basis of Computer Science

Slide 16

Slide 16 text

No content

Slide 17

Slide 17 text

No content

Slide 18

Slide 18 text

No content

Slide 19

Slide 19 text

No content

Slide 20

Slide 20 text

No content

Slide 21

Slide 21 text

Trichromacy

Slide 22

Slide 22 text

No content

Slide 23

Slide 23 text

No content

Slide 24

Slide 24 text

No content

Slide 25

Slide 25 text

No content

Slide 26

Slide 26 text

Patterns and Algorithms

Slide 27

Slide 27 text

No content

Slide 28

Slide 28 text

No content

Slide 29

Slide 29 text

No content

Slide 30

Slide 30 text

No content

Slide 31

Slide 31 text

No content

Slide 32

Slide 32 text

No content

Slide 33

Slide 33 text

No content

Slide 34

Slide 34 text

No content

Slide 35

Slide 35 text

No content

Slide 36

Slide 36 text

?

Slide 37

Slide 37 text

?

Slide 38

Slide 38 text

No content

Slide 39

Slide 39 text

No content

Slide 40

Slide 40 text

Is magenta real?

Slide 41

Slide 41 text

# FF00FF

Slide 42

Slide 42 text

No content

Slide 43

Slide 43 text

No content

Slide 44

Slide 44 text

Data Abstraction

Slide 45

Slide 45 text

No content

Slide 46

Slide 46 text

“Dataless Programming” RM Balzer - 1967

Slide 47

Slide 47 text

No content

Slide 48

Slide 48 text

No content

Slide 49

Slide 49 text

Space

Slide 50

Slide 50 text

No content

Slide 51

Slide 51 text

No content

Slide 52

Slide 52 text

No content

Slide 53

Slide 53 text

Wait, what?

Slide 54

Slide 54 text

Are we still talking about abstraction?

Slide 55

Slide 55 text

No content

Slide 56

Slide 56 text

No content

Slide 57

Slide 57 text

No content

Slide 58

Slide 58 text

No content

Slide 59

Slide 59 text

# FF00FF

Slide 60

Slide 60 text

Control Abstraction

Slide 61

Slide 61 text

Subroutines

Slide 62

Slide 62 text

“Go To Statement considered harmfull” Edsger Dijkstra, 1968

Slide 63

Slide 63 text

“Protection in Programming Languages" James H. Morris Jr., 1973

Slide 64

Slide 64 text

No content

Slide 65

Slide 65 text

You should be able to reason about modules in isolation

Slide 66

Slide 66 text

“Global Variables Considered Harmful” W.A. Wulf, M. Shaw, 1973

Slide 67

Slide 67 text

Tetrachromacy

Slide 68

Slide 68 text

No content

Slide 69

Slide 69 text

2-3% of all women? 50% of all women?

Slide 70

Slide 70 text

Gene on X chromosome OPN1MW and OPN1MW2

Slide 71

Slide 71 text

Women could have up to six colour cones

Slide 72

Slide 72 text

Mostly dysfunctional

Slide 73

Slide 73 text

At least two confirmed cases

Slide 74

Slide 74 text

Seeing millions of more colours

Slide 75

Slide 75 text

No content

Slide 76

Slide 76 text

No content

Slide 77

Slide 77 text

No content

Slide 78

Slide 78 text

No content

Slide 79

Slide 79 text

No content

Slide 80

Slide 80 text

Object Oriented Programming

Slide 81

Slide 81 text

No content

Slide 82

Slide 82 text

No content

Slide 83

Slide 83 text

#alankayholdingthings

Slide 84

Slide 84 text

No content

Slide 85

Slide 85 text

–Alan Kay “OOP to me means only messaging, local retention and protection and hiding of state- process, and extreme late-binding of all things.”

Slide 86

Slide 86 text

Data Abstraction + Control Abstraction = Object Oriented Programming

Slide 87

Slide 87 text

Why dysfunctional? (my own unscientific theory)

Slide 88

Slide 88 text

We don’t see colours with our eyes

Slide 89

Slide 89 text

We see colours with our brain

Slide 90

Slide 90 text

Our brain adjusts colours

Slide 91

Slide 91 text

We don’t see colours we don’t have an abstract concept for

Slide 92

Slide 92 text

No content

Slide 93

Slide 93 text

When we learn to speak, colour perception switches from left brain side to right brain side

Slide 94

Slide 94 text

We make the rules

Slide 95

Slide 95 text

Some rules enable good programs (For some definition of good.)

Slide 96

Slide 96 text

Single Responsibility Principle

Slide 97

Slide 97 text

Liskov Substitution Principle

Slide 98

Slide 98 text

Law of Demeter

Slide 99

Slide 99 text

Don’t abstract too much, too early

Slide 100

Slide 100 text

No content

Slide 101

Slide 101 text

Strong external abstractions allow weak internal abstractions

Slide 102

Slide 102 text

Distributed Applications

Slide 103

Slide 103 text

Is magenta a colour?

Slide 104

Slide 104 text

No content

Slide 105

Slide 105 text

Yes

Slide 106

Slide 106 text

Inheritance

Slide 107

Slide 107 text

Type Hierarchy Liskov Substitution Principle

Slide 108

Slide 108 text

Implementation Sharing

Slide 109

Slide 109 text

Mixins

Slide 110

Slide 110 text

Composition

Slide 111

Slide 111 text

Duck Typing

Slide 112

Slide 112 text

Are we doing it right?

Slide 113

Slide 113 text

Classes ≠ OOP

Slide 114

Slide 114 text

Colour and Abstraction

Slide 115

Slide 115 text

No content

Slide 116

Slide 116 text

No content

Slide 117

Slide 117 text

Himba Tribe (Namibia)

Slide 118

Slide 118 text

No content

Slide 119

Slide 119 text

zuzu: dark shades of blue, red, green and purple ! vapa: white, some shades of yellow ! buru: some shades of green and blue ! dambu: some shades of green, red and brown

Slide 120

Slide 120 text

No content

Slide 121

Slide 121 text

No content

Slide 122

Slide 122 text

Abstractions and Security

Slide 123

Slide 123 text

Most attacks rely on switching up or down abstraction levels

Slide 124

Slide 124 text

No content

Slide 125

Slide 125 text

No content

Slide 126

Slide 126 text

No content

Slide 127

Slide 127 text

No content

Slide 128

Slide 128 text

Abstraction

Slide 129

Slide 129 text

Business Logic only exists in our minds

Slide 130

Slide 130 text

Object Oriented Programming only exists in our minds

Slide 131

Slide 131 text

Colours only exist in our minds

Slide 132

Slide 132 text

UI elements only exist in our minds

Slide 133

Slide 133 text

Countries only exist in our minds

Slide 134

Slide 134 text

Conclusion

Slide 135

Slide 135 text

Abstraction happens in our minds

Slide 136

Slide 136 text

All abstraction

Slide 137

Slide 137 text

Abstractions shape how we perceive things

Slide 138

Slide 138 text

Changing abstractions is a basic principle of innovation and progress

Slide 139

Slide 139 text

Thanks! @konstantinhaase me@rkh.im