However, Torvalds’s idea is not a romantic appeal to aesthetics for their own sake. In practice, beautiful code is often easier to maintain, debug, and adapt. When a solution is clean, future changes can be made with confidence; when it is tangled, even small modifications introduce fear. Robert C. Martin’s Clean Code (2008) popularized this same insight by linking readability directly to long-term software quality.
Consequently, beauty becomes a practical asset. Teams inherit one another’s decisions, and elegant structure reduces cognitive burden. What looks graceful today often becomes what remains reliable tomorrow. [...]