These examples include the notion of a "base" against which the various envs provide adaptations. The problem with this model is that any change to base will immediately be applied to all envs. Avoiding this effect is error-prone. There are some cases where this model is an acceptable trade-off, but I don't think we should treat it as default.
These examples include the notion of a "base" against which the various envs provide adaptations. The problem with this model is that any change to base will immediately be applied to all envs. Avoiding this effect is error-prone. There are some cases where this model is an acceptable trade-off, but I don't think we should treat it as default.