Tirado de: http://wiki.c2.com/?EncapsulationIsNotInformationHiding (ênfase minha):
As the article linked to at the top of the page mentions, "information hiding" was introduced by DavidParnas in the early 1970's. The best known (but I believe not earliest) paper by him about it is OnDecomposingSystems, where he shows two decompositions of a system for producing a KWIC index. This paper is also referenced by the CodeComplete chapter on modularity. The conclusion of the paper recommends that "one begins [to decompose a system] with a list of difficult design decisions or design decisions that are likely to change. Each module is then designed to hide such a decision from the others." this is contrasted with the "conventional" decomposition, which is driven by functional decomposition. The two solutions to the KWIC problem are not presented at a high level of detail, but do clearly involve a program built out of "functions or procedures", a module being accessed by the use of some nominated functions that form the interface to the module. The paper is all about improving the use of modular programming.
O artigo do Parnas é muito bem considerado mas também muito árido de se ler. Alguém explica essa abordagem enfatizada na citação que projeta um módulo baseado em uma lista de decisões de design difíceis ou de decisões de design prováveis de sofrer mudança? Como isso se dá na prática?
Links adicionais:
Descrição simplificada do artigo
Conteúdo de um curso na Stanford University sobre design de software que aborda o estudo do artigo (o próprio instrutor tem um livro sobre design de software, que trata da separação em módulos).