Published on 18 May 2014.
A few days ago I explained how a system worked to a college. Or rather, I let a visualization program do it. The system consists of services that talk to each other over TCP. The program captured the flow of messages between services during a test run and visualized them with arrows between nodes.
I found it effective to explain how the system worked by actually showing how the different parts interacted.
A related example is understanding the difference between a recursive function and an iterative function. When I learned that in school, we drew the call stack on paper and found that the recursive function generated a triangle shape whereas the iterative function generated a linear shape. When only reading the code, you could not immediately see that.
So visualizing how a piece of code works probably works on different levels. Making visualizations might be useful.
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