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bernhard-lehner t1_iqpxkj7 wrote

"Document, document, document,...". Lol, and who the hell is going to find time to ever go back and read the documentation? I'm not sure if this post was written by somebody who actually works on the level of research and coding...

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melgor89 t1_iqrxupz wrote

I would say that lack of documentation is one of the key issues in startups. Ex. Then nobody knows why sth was created on that way, what are the scores from the previous version, what was the main issue from last model. Everything is in sb mind, but when this research left the company, retreating the whole pipeline takes a lot of time.

So I would say proper documentation + simple code, without unnecessary abstraction is a key to move startup further.

People say that there is no time for making documentation as there are more important tasks. From my perspective, it is short term thinking as then you would spend 3x more time on figuring it out why sth was done in such way. This is just my thoughts, based on 5 years in startups and 4 in corporations.

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rlagent32 t1_iqtw03a wrote

I don't work in a startup but the culture at my place is very startup like. Lot of prototyping and fast iteration. In such a fast moving environment, code is constantly evolving so without the right documentation, it can get extremely hard to understand what the code is even trying to do. Of course there's a tradeoff between actually getting work done vs documenting what you're doing. But having the right level of documentation is a great investment since it allows people to actually focus on moving forward with development.

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