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Home/ Questions/Q 3347872
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 18, 20262026-05-18T01:28:25+00:00 2026-05-18T01:28:25+00:00

I have worked a lot on improving how my code runs (and it’s beauty),

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I have worked a lot on improving how my code runs (and it’s “beauty”), but when is the time to stop fixing, and start working on the UI?

Microsoft (in my opinion) seems to go with the nice-code, while Apple goes with nice UI (although Apple’s developer examples do have very nice code).

I’m bad at balancing, when is it the time to work on one or the other?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-18T01:28:26+00:00Added an answer on May 18, 2026 at 1:28 am

    If the user doesn’t like the program, the quality of the code is irrelevant. Once the user likes the program, then code quality becomes more important. And by “like” I mean a good user experience where the program doesn’t crash, fulfills the need that the user has and adhere’s to the Principle of Least Surprise.

    Note I say “more important” because code is not something the user sees or is interested in. Code quality and “beauty” is important to developers because it’s what they see of the program and what they hand over to other developers.

    I remember reading something some time ago comparing (in general terms) software developed for the windows platform and software developed for OS X. In general terms it said that windows programs tended to be developed by developers who didn’t spend too much time on the UI or thinking about the user experience. Their concentration was getting every piece of functionality they could think of into the program without any thought about it making sense. Mac OS X on the other hand tended to be developed by people concentrating on the user experience first and solving their problems. So it didn’t necessarily have as much functionality, but what it did have was directly associated with what the user needed and was easy to use.

    So when is it time to stop and think about the UI? The fact that you have asked the question makes me think it’s time to stop right now. If anything I’d suggest that even before writing any code you should have drawn out a basic UI and worked out what sort of user experience your program is going to provide If you cannot work that out, you don’t want to wasting time writing code because you will never use it.

    Thats not to say I think code “beauty” is irrelevant. I spend time on making sure my code is well written, easy to follow and looks “good”. But that’s after I’ve figured out the UI and because I’ve had a lot of experience with cleaning up other people aweful code 🙂

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