OOP proponents usually claim that structured programming projects become too complex for any individual or group to manage at around 100,000 lines of code, but the only references my Google-fu was able to dig up for that claim are twenty-some years out of date:
C. Jones, Programming Productivity, McGraw-Hill, New York, New York, 1986.
C. Jones, Editor, Tutorial Programming Productivity: Issues for The Eighties, Second Edition, IEEE Catalog No. EHO239-4, IEEE Computer Society Press, Washington, DC, 1986.
OOP proponents usually claim that structured programming projects become too complex for any individual or group to manage at around 100,000 lines of code, but the only references my Google-fu was able to dig up for that claim are twenty-some years out of date:
C. Jones, Programming Productivity, McGraw-Hill, New York, New York, 1986.
C. Jones, Editor, Tutorial Programming Productivity: Issues for The Eighties, Second Edition, IEEE Catalog No. EHO239-4, IEEE Computer Society Press, Washington, DC, 1986.