modulárn
Modulárn is a term used in some European languages, notably Slovak, to describe a design philosophy or system built from modular components. In this sense, modulárn refers to approaches that emphasize interchangeability, well-defined interfaces, and independent development of components, enabling composition into larger systems. The concept is cross-disciplinary and is not tied to a single formal standard; its specifics vary by domain.
Origin and usage: The adjective modulárn stems from modulárny (modular). In technical writing it is often used
Principles: Key principles include separation of concerns, encapsulation, loose coupling, explicit interfaces, versioning, and clear compatibility
Applications: In software engineering, modulárn underlies modular monoliths, plug-in architectures, and microservices; in hardware, modular hardware
Advantages: Increased flexibility, easier maintenance, reuse of components, incremental upgrades, and faster customization.
Challenges: Dependency management, interface drift, performance overhead from indirection, and the need for standards to ensure
See also: modular design, plug-in architecture, microservices, modular synthesis.