Mostly, in software design you'd hear about anti-patterns(I haven't seen anyone using the term anti-design). The things you've described(MVC, MVVM etc..) are actually software architectural patterns, simply design patterns. Design patterns have been invented to solve common software problems, but of course, they are not universal solutions(they have pros/cons and trade-off). And anti-pattern means such design pattern, that creates much more of a problem rather being a solution, though at first it seems to be a great solution. Such an example is singleton pattern. Actually, it's still encouraged in many cases, but single pattern causes a lot of problem in terms of code maintenance and testing.
Of course, you'd hear about software architectures too, such as monolithic architecture, microservices, service oriented achitecture i.e. soa(actually microservices is a kind of soa) etc...
It's always good to learn design patterns and software architectures...but take your time to understand and apply those :)...
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Is the said "anti design" an absolute indicator, that the project will fail, or just in some ways?
@patarapolw
Mostly, in software design you'd hear about
anti-patterns
(I haven't seen anyone using the termanti-design
). The things you've described(MVC, MVVM etc..) are actually software architectural patterns, simplydesign patterns
. Design patterns have been invented to solve common software problems, but of course, they are not universal solutions(they have pros/cons and trade-off). And anti-pattern means such design pattern, that creates much more of a problem rather being a solution, though at first it seems to be a great solution. Such an example issingleton pattern
. Actually, it's still encouraged in many cases, but single pattern causes a lot of problem in terms of code maintenance and testing.Of course, you'd hear about software architectures too, such as
monolithic architecture
,microservices
,service oriented achitecture i.e. soa
(actuallymicroservices
is a kind ofsoa
) etc...It's always good to learn design patterns and software architectures...but take your time to understand and apply those :)...