Skoobie Dew
Jul 10, 2017 · 2 min read

You have hit the nail RIGHT on its head about OO, the most useless, stupid and wasteful thing that this humankind has ever invented!! You are absolutely correct in your article that all three supposed benefits of OO are nothing but scams!! All OO is just bunch of filing cabinets of variables and functions/procedures; that’s all it is, occupying multiple memory space blocks of the same thing and making doing something as simple as getting a variable with exponential amount of efforts!! The inheritance of OO is a TOTALLY unnecessary. 99% of the classes that you inherit are totally uesless; you have to implement interface, structures, create your own methods anyway, so WHY bother inherit it? And WHY bother creating that class in the first place when nobody else can use it? The encapsulation is even a bigger joke! You are the one who wrote the class, now you are the same person who is writing the codes to use that class so WHY encapsulate something from yourself??!! And the encapsulation concept itself is like wearing clothes that are transparent; everybody can see what’s “inside” that class but nobody can use it. WHY are you so scared of people using and seeing the variables? People are going to have to use them anyway when they inherit your class, otherwise why create your class in the first place? And everybody just spends their time all day doing the endless “get, set, get, set, get, set, get, set…” to just get one variables when they could be spending half of the time writing lot more programs.

OO has achieved NOTHING for the evolution of programming and actually set the evolution of programming back for like centuries. Everything that I write in OO could be written in half the time, half the resources, twice the efficiency using any of the procedural programming languages. So far all OO has achieved is producing overworked programmers and ten thousand gigabytes of RAM. One day people in the future is going to look back at this OO and laugh at us so hard like how we laugh at people in the history that used to see how the blood drips in a bowl to determine paternity.