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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 19, 20262026-05-19T11:38:02+00:00 2026-05-19T11:38:02+00:00

I am very new to c++ and confused between what is the difference between

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I am very new to c++ and confused between what is the difference between modular programming and function oriented programming.I have never done modular programming so I just know modules by definition that it contains functions.So what is the difference between a sequential(function-oriented language)and modular programming?Thanks in advance.

EDIT:
I was reading about C++’s OOP.It started something like what is unstructured programming, than gave a basic idea about structured programming, than modular programming and finally,OOP.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-19T11:38:03+00:00Added an answer on May 19, 2026 at 11:38 am

    Modular programming is mostly a strategy to reduce coupling in a computer program, mostly by means of encapsulation.

    Before modular programming, local coherence of the code was ensured by structured programming, but global coherence was lacking: if you decided that your spell-checking dictionary would be implemented as a red-black tree, then this implementation would be exposed to everyone else in the program, so that the programmer working on, say, text rendering, would be able to access the red-black tree nodes to do meaningful things with them.

    Of course, this became hell once you needed to change the implementation of your dictionary, because then you would have to fix the code of other programmers as well.

    Even worse, if the implementation detail involved global variables, then you had to be exceedingly careful of who changed them and in what order, or strange bugs would crop up.

    Modular programming applied encapsulation to all of this, by separating the implementation (private to the module) from the interface (what the rest of the program can use). So, a dictionary module could expose an abstract type that would only be accessible through module functions such as findWord(word,dictionary). Someone working on the dictionary module would never need to peek outside that module to check if someone might be using an implementation detail.

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