That's a good question. I think part of it is low regression bug count. Also the code is usually clear enough that tracking down the code is pretty easy.
That would indeed make a big difference. The code that I'm used to working with tends to have complex flows (not in a spaghetti way, it just needs to do a lot), with fairly large amount of business-related decisions (i.e. 'what' and 'how' are insufficient, you need 'why' as well).
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That's a good question. I think part of it is low regression bug count. Also the code is usually clear enough that tracking down the code is pretty easy.
That would indeed make a big difference. The code that I'm used to working with tends to have complex flows (not in a spaghetti way, it just needs to do a lot), with fairly large amount of business-related decisions (i.e. 'what' and 'how' are insufficient, you need 'why' as well).