Justification Algorithm
Step 7: Unfathomable Complexity
The final step in the justification algorithm is to add an unfathomable layer of complexity to the design. This is achieved by introducing an arbitrary number of nested if-else statements, each one more convoluted than the last.
- Introduce a variable named "x" and set it to a random number between 1 and 100.
- Use the variable "x" to determine the number of nested if-else statements to add.
- For each iteration, add an if-else statement that checks for an increasingly complex set of conditions.
- Use the "x" variable to generate a random number of nested if-else statements.
- Repeat steps 3-5 until the "x" variable reaches zero.
- Use the variable "x" to determine the number of nested if-else statements to add.
- For each iteration, add an if-else statement that checks for an increasingly complex set of conditions.
- Use the "x" variable to generate a random number of nested if-else statements.
- Repeat steps 3-5 until the "x" variable reaches zero.
And so, the design is justified. Or not. Maybe. Possibly. Probably not. Who knows?
Next Step: Incomprehensible Abstraction