C
Chase Preuninger
I am board and want to do something with Java I/O (networking
included). Any Ideas???
included). Any Ideas???
Chase said:I am board and want to do something with Java I/O (networking
included). Any Ideas???
see http://mindprod.com/project/projects.htmlI am board and want to do something with Java I/O (networking
included). Any Ideas???
Spelling and grammar have never been my strong point.
and several more good points. On top of all those, being careless about
spelling builds bad habits in a profession that demands spelling perfection
(or at least consistency). Justifying that carelessness (especially with a
justification as weak as, "I make errors because I'm not good at not making
errors") is another bad habit. Working on spelling, at least when discussing
programming matters, and acknowledging one's errors without attempting to
justify them are good disciplines for the mind.
Agreed but refactoring solves this problem.Roedy Green said:Programmers tend to be proud of poor spelling and grammar. They think
of those skills as feminine or frivolous. However, they are necessary
skills for programmers because:
1. computer languages require perfect, or at least consistent
spelling.
2. on a team, you will drive people nuts if you don't use properly
spelled variable names because they won't be able to type them
correctly.
They do, and they tell you immediately if it is incorrect.3. computer languages require perfect grammar.
True, but his posts were easily understood.4. Computer programs tend to do subtle things. You need to be able to
explain to other programmers what they are in the comments.. You can't
get away with shorthand that only you can understand.
This is because spelling, grammar and your speaking voice are all used5. If you are asking for help, and you make a large number of errors
in your grammar or spelling, it may be taken as disrespectful.
Further, you will may be perceived as too stupid to bother with.
I get emails from soldiers with hundreds of spelling and grammatical
errors. I can't help but feel contempt for these people even before
they start attempting to justify why they kill children.
I agree that that is legitimate for general social situations, but in a
newsgroup that promotes professionalism and enhanced competency in
computer programming it's useful to suggest increased discipline in
these areas. Some attention to grammar and spelling is necessary just
to be professional; simply saying, "I'm bad at that" and insisting on
some sort of demagogic "let's all just be social equals" fooferol
doesn't engender any kind of professional growth. Rigor is an essential
part of the programming profession, so please do not justify
intellectual laziness.
Martin said:I've seen comments in several places and at several times that a *good*
programmer also tends to be particular about spelling and grammar as well
as meticulous in their use of language. I've read enough well-crafted code
and accurate, well written system specifications to believe this to be
true.
Not a chance! I can't even order a beer in Danish despite spending a weekCould you demonstrate your spelling and grammar skills by
writing the above in correct danish ?
Martin said:Not a chance! I can't even order a beer in Danish despite spending a week
in Hilleroed with visits to Ringsted and Copenhavn. That was a VERY
long time ago but good memories linger on.
Jeff said:Sure.
Work harder on your English spelling and grammar.
Roedy Green's Canadian Mind Products site has many
suggestions for Java projects,
<http://mindprod.com/projects/projects.html>
unfortunatly getting a 404 error at the moment.
--- Chase Preuninger said:Date: Sun, 6 Apr 2008 05:05:59 -0700 (PDT)
Subject: Re: Java I/O Project
From: Chase Preuninger <[email protected]>
To: Jeff Higgins
It looks like just mindprod.com is some flower site
Agreed but refactoring solves this problem.
My experience is that Danish is hard to learn on a visit because you Danes"En øl, tak"
should do that.
(now you just need to figure out how to pronounce that ...)
The context, as I saw it anyway, was one of sloppy spelling/ grammar/My point was that English is not the native language for everyone and
you should not expect perfect spelling and grammar from everyone.
My experience is that Danish is hard to learn on a visit because you Danes
insist on speaking such good English to native English speakers.
When I visited the Netherlands I found only one person who did not speak
English, but he was able to speak enough English to clearly explain
that. It seemed so odd a person who could pronounce English so well did
not speak it.
Martin Gregorie said:I've had that explained to me as "nobody else speaks Dutch, so we have to
speak other languages".
Most Dutch speak good English, so much so that often seen the following: a
set of British lads are standing chatting when some Dutch friends come
over and join in. The conversation stays in English as people come and go.
Eventually the last Briton leaves the group. Almost anywhere else this
would signal an instant switch to their native tongue but not in Holland:
there they're equally likely to go on speaking English.
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