Comment by strbean
8 days ago
It's nearly guaranteed, even if it is just because customers had to work around the bug in such a way that their flow now breaks when the bug is gone.
Obligatory: https://xkcd.com/1172/
8 days ago
It's nearly guaranteed, even if it is just because customers had to work around the bug in such a way that their flow now breaks when the bug is gone.
Obligatory: https://xkcd.com/1172/
That comic doesn't show someone working around a bug in such a way that their flow breaks when the bug is gone. It shows them incorporating a bug into their workflow for purposes of causing the bug to occur.
It isn't actually possible for fixing a bug to break a workaround. The point of a workaround is that you're not doing the thing that's broken; when that thing is fixed, your flow won't be affected, because you weren't doing it anyway.
It might be as simple as a property name containing a typo, and the workaround being to expect that incorrectly spelled property name. When the typo is fixed, the code that was expecting the misspelled property breaks.
Maybe it's a bad workaround, but your users will almost certainly implement bad workarounds.
> It isn't actually possible for fixing a bug to break a workaround.
That's not true. For instance, if there's a bug in formatting, that might be worked around by handing the unintended formatting. But now you're (maybe) not handling the intended formatting, and a fix would break you.
Also known as Hyrum's Law (https://www.hyrumslaw.com/), but more people know the XKCD at this point :)