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  3. Has any programming language ever affected your thought process in real life?

Has any programming language ever affected your thought process in real life?

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  • L leonej_dt

    Hello, everybody: First of all, excuse me for this extremely weird thing I'm going to say. I have the following problem: My favorite programming language, C++, is affecting the way I think in real life. I tend to assume other people have the ability (not to mention the willingness) to make huge abstractions when I talk to them. I expect them to be able to distinguish between a thing being referred and the reference itself. My ability to communicate my thoughts to the people I live, work and am supposed to have fun with is severely impaired by the fact most of these thoughts are "constructed" using concepts understandable only to C++ lawyers. Has anybody experienced a similar thing (not necessarily with C++)? Do I have to go to a psychologist or a psychiatrist? Is my problem beyond repair? Thanks in advance, Eduardo León

    If you can play The Dance of Eternity (Dream Theater), then we shall make a band.

    S Offline
    S Offline
    Super Lloyd
    wrote on last edited by
    #8

    I'm alright in this regard, just so you know! ;P

    A train station is where the train stops. A bus station is where the bus stops. On my desk, I have a work station.... _________________________________________________________ My programs never have bugs, they just develop random features.

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    • L leonej_dt

      Hello, everybody: First of all, excuse me for this extremely weird thing I'm going to say. I have the following problem: My favorite programming language, C++, is affecting the way I think in real life. I tend to assume other people have the ability (not to mention the willingness) to make huge abstractions when I talk to them. I expect them to be able to distinguish between a thing being referred and the reference itself. My ability to communicate my thoughts to the people I live, work and am supposed to have fun with is severely impaired by the fact most of these thoughts are "constructed" using concepts understandable only to C++ lawyers. Has anybody experienced a similar thing (not necessarily with C++)? Do I have to go to a psychologist or a psychiatrist? Is my problem beyond repair? Thanks in advance, Eduardo León

      If you can play The Dance of Eternity (Dream Theater), then we shall make a band.

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      Jorgen Sigvardsson
      wrote on last edited by
      #9

      It's not the programming language per se that is affecting your thought processes. It's programming in general that does that to you.

      -- Kein Mitleid Für Die Mehrheit

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      • L leonej_dt

        Hello, everybody: First of all, excuse me for this extremely weird thing I'm going to say. I have the following problem: My favorite programming language, C++, is affecting the way I think in real life. I tend to assume other people have the ability (not to mention the willingness) to make huge abstractions when I talk to them. I expect them to be able to distinguish between a thing being referred and the reference itself. My ability to communicate my thoughts to the people I live, work and am supposed to have fun with is severely impaired by the fact most of these thoughts are "constructed" using concepts understandable only to C++ lawyers. Has anybody experienced a similar thing (not necessarily with C++)? Do I have to go to a psychologist or a psychiatrist? Is my problem beyond repair? Thanks in advance, Eduardo León

        If you can play The Dance of Eternity (Dream Theater), then we shall make a band.

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        C Offline
        Chris Austin
        wrote on last edited by
        #10

        No. I've never experienced this.

        leonej_dt wrote:

        Do I have to go to a psychologist or a psychiatrist? Is my problem beyond repair?

        I assume you are being facetious but, of course not.

        Sovereign ingredient for a happy marriage: Pay cash or do without. Interest charges not only eat up a household budget; awareness of debt eats up domestic felicity. --Lazarus Long Avoid the crowd. Do your own thinking independently. Be the chess player, not the chess piece. --Ralph Charell

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        • L leonej_dt

          Hello, everybody: First of all, excuse me for this extremely weird thing I'm going to say. I have the following problem: My favorite programming language, C++, is affecting the way I think in real life. I tend to assume other people have the ability (not to mention the willingness) to make huge abstractions when I talk to them. I expect them to be able to distinguish between a thing being referred and the reference itself. My ability to communicate my thoughts to the people I live, work and am supposed to have fun with is severely impaired by the fact most of these thoughts are "constructed" using concepts understandable only to C++ lawyers. Has anybody experienced a similar thing (not necessarily with C++)? Do I have to go to a psychologist or a psychiatrist? Is my problem beyond repair? Thanks in advance, Eduardo León

          If you can play The Dance of Eternity (Dream Theater), then we shall make a band.

          U Offline
          U Offline
          User 3824460
          wrote on last edited by
          #11

          Not programming language actually.. But once, I was sitting next to the computer and scribbling something on paper. I made a mistake on paper and was trying to correct it by hitting CTRL + Z on the keyboard ;P

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          • L leonej_dt

            Hello, everybody: First of all, excuse me for this extremely weird thing I'm going to say. I have the following problem: My favorite programming language, C++, is affecting the way I think in real life. I tend to assume other people have the ability (not to mention the willingness) to make huge abstractions when I talk to them. I expect them to be able to distinguish between a thing being referred and the reference itself. My ability to communicate my thoughts to the people I live, work and am supposed to have fun with is severely impaired by the fact most of these thoughts are "constructed" using concepts understandable only to C++ lawyers. Has anybody experienced a similar thing (not necessarily with C++)? Do I have to go to a psychologist or a psychiatrist? Is my problem beyond repair? Thanks in advance, Eduardo León

            If you can play The Dance of Eternity (Dream Theater), then we shall make a band.

            S Offline
            S Offline
            Stuart Dootson
            wrote on last edited by
            #12

            I guess learning about OO design had that sort of effect on me - I tend to presume that as it seems the most obvious way of reasoning about a system to me, other people will think the same way - and of course, they don't necessarily... In terms of languages, the one that affected the way I think the most was Haskell[^] - but that was in terms of how I think about programming - the way I implemented things in C++ changed big time once I started to understand what Haskell and functional programming were really about.

            Java, Basic, who cares - it's all a bunch of tree-hugging hippy cr*p

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            • L leonej_dt

              Hello, everybody: First of all, excuse me for this extremely weird thing I'm going to say. I have the following problem: My favorite programming language, C++, is affecting the way I think in real life. I tend to assume other people have the ability (not to mention the willingness) to make huge abstractions when I talk to them. I expect them to be able to distinguish between a thing being referred and the reference itself. My ability to communicate my thoughts to the people I live, work and am supposed to have fun with is severely impaired by the fact most of these thoughts are "constructed" using concepts understandable only to C++ lawyers. Has anybody experienced a similar thing (not necessarily with C++)? Do I have to go to a psychologist or a psychiatrist? Is my problem beyond repair? Thanks in advance, Eduardo León

              If you can play The Dance of Eternity (Dream Theater), then we shall make a band.

              J Offline
              J Offline
              John Oxley
              wrote on last edited by
              #13

              Regular Expressions. I tend to "see" matches for certain groups of items, for example, shopping. /.*milk.*/i Whenever someone says something thought provoking, my mind starts making up regex's that will match various parts of the statement. And after a sixpack or 2, my mates aren't really sure what I mean when I slurr "slash whack dee plus slash beer".

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              • L leonej_dt

                Hello, everybody: First of all, excuse me for this extremely weird thing I'm going to say. I have the following problem: My favorite programming language, C++, is affecting the way I think in real life. I tend to assume other people have the ability (not to mention the willingness) to make huge abstractions when I talk to them. I expect them to be able to distinguish between a thing being referred and the reference itself. My ability to communicate my thoughts to the people I live, work and am supposed to have fun with is severely impaired by the fact most of these thoughts are "constructed" using concepts understandable only to C++ lawyers. Has anybody experienced a similar thing (not necessarily with C++)? Do I have to go to a psychologist or a psychiatrist? Is my problem beyond repair? Thanks in advance, Eduardo León

                If you can play The Dance of Eternity (Dream Theater), then we shall make a band.

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                V Offline
                VE2
                wrote on last edited by
                #14

                If true in my life then no one has commented on it so far; else it would have imapcted my writing ability; or altered the way I think. While I do consider a problem algorithmically until the process has completed I usually return a valid result.

                73

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                • V VE2

                  If true in my life then no one has commented on it so far; else it would have imapcted my writing ability; or altered the way I think. While I do consider a problem algorithmically until the process has completed I usually return a valid result.

                  73

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                  0x3c0
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #15

                  :laugh: Gets my 5.

                  OSDev

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                  • L leonej_dt

                    Hello, everybody: First of all, excuse me for this extremely weird thing I'm going to say. I have the following problem: My favorite programming language, C++, is affecting the way I think in real life. I tend to assume other people have the ability (not to mention the willingness) to make huge abstractions when I talk to them. I expect them to be able to distinguish between a thing being referred and the reference itself. My ability to communicate my thoughts to the people I live, work and am supposed to have fun with is severely impaired by the fact most of these thoughts are "constructed" using concepts understandable only to C++ lawyers. Has anybody experienced a similar thing (not necessarily with C++)? Do I have to go to a psychologist or a psychiatrist? Is my problem beyond repair? Thanks in advance, Eduardo León

                    If you can play The Dance of Eternity (Dream Theater), then we shall make a band.

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                    0 Offline
                    0x3c0
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #16

                    Yes. I don't tend to think in words now, just abstract classes and semicolons. I don't know whether to be very happy (I'm a little better at programming because of it) or annoyed (it sometimes annoys my family)

                    OSDev

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                    • J John Oxley

                      Regular Expressions. I tend to "see" matches for certain groups of items, for example, shopping. /.*milk.*/i Whenever someone says something thought provoking, my mind starts making up regex's that will match various parts of the statement. And after a sixpack or 2, my mates aren't really sure what I mean when I slurr "slash whack dee plus slash beer".

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                      Oyvind Sean Kinsey
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #17

                      Maybe not a programming issue, but still - when ending IM-conversations, I find that I keep writing 'exit'. So far I have realized that I was using the 'wrong syntax' before pressing enter..

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                      • L leonej_dt

                        Hello, everybody: First of all, excuse me for this extremely weird thing I'm going to say. I have the following problem: My favorite programming language, C++, is affecting the way I think in real life. I tend to assume other people have the ability (not to mention the willingness) to make huge abstractions when I talk to them. I expect them to be able to distinguish between a thing being referred and the reference itself. My ability to communicate my thoughts to the people I live, work and am supposed to have fun with is severely impaired by the fact most of these thoughts are "constructed" using concepts understandable only to C++ lawyers. Has anybody experienced a similar thing (not necessarily with C++)? Do I have to go to a psychologist or a psychiatrist? Is my problem beyond repair? Thanks in advance, Eduardo León

                        If you can play The Dance of Eternity (Dream Theater), then we shall make a band.

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                        dwales
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #18

                        Yes, all of them. Programming is real life isn't it?

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                        • L leonej_dt

                          Hello, everybody: First of all, excuse me for this extremely weird thing I'm going to say. I have the following problem: My favorite programming language, C++, is affecting the way I think in real life. I tend to assume other people have the ability (not to mention the willingness) to make huge abstractions when I talk to them. I expect them to be able to distinguish between a thing being referred and the reference itself. My ability to communicate my thoughts to the people I live, work and am supposed to have fun with is severely impaired by the fact most of these thoughts are "constructed" using concepts understandable only to C++ lawyers. Has anybody experienced a similar thing (not necessarily with C++)? Do I have to go to a psychologist or a psychiatrist? Is my problem beyond repair? Thanks in advance, Eduardo León

                          If you can play The Dance of Eternity (Dream Theater), then we shall make a band.

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                          Tom Deketelaere
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #19

                          Not a language but more the whole of programming has effected me. I tend to approach a problem in 'real' life just as I approach a problem in a program. Identify the problem --> divide it into smaller easier problems until solved. It's driving my parents mad, but I don't have any problems with it ;P

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                          • U User 3824460

                            Not programming language actually.. But once, I was sitting next to the computer and scribbling something on paper. I made a mistake on paper and was trying to correct it by hitting CTRL + Z on the keyboard ;P

                            0 Offline
                            0 Offline
                            0x3c0
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #20

                            You're no alone there. I've tried to press the power button by clicking on it. Fortunately nobody saw :doh:

                            OSDev

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                            • L leonej_dt

                              Hello, everybody: First of all, excuse me for this extremely weird thing I'm going to say. I have the following problem: My favorite programming language, C++, is affecting the way I think in real life. I tend to assume other people have the ability (not to mention the willingness) to make huge abstractions when I talk to them. I expect them to be able to distinguish between a thing being referred and the reference itself. My ability to communicate my thoughts to the people I live, work and am supposed to have fun with is severely impaired by the fact most of these thoughts are "constructed" using concepts understandable only to C++ lawyers. Has anybody experienced a similar thing (not necessarily with C++)? Do I have to go to a psychologist or a psychiatrist? Is my problem beyond repair? Thanks in advance, Eduardo León

                              If you can play The Dance of Eternity (Dream Theater), then we shall make a band.

                              M Offline
                              M Offline
                              Mark_Wallace
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #21

                              Since I introduced COBOL's PERFORM VARYING into my home life, my wife hasn't stopped moaning.

                              I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!

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                              • L leonej_dt

                                Hello, everybody: First of all, excuse me for this extremely weird thing I'm going to say. I have the following problem: My favorite programming language, C++, is affecting the way I think in real life. I tend to assume other people have the ability (not to mention the willingness) to make huge abstractions when I talk to them. I expect them to be able to distinguish between a thing being referred and the reference itself. My ability to communicate my thoughts to the people I live, work and am supposed to have fun with is severely impaired by the fact most of these thoughts are "constructed" using concepts understandable only to C++ lawyers. Has anybody experienced a similar thing (not necessarily with C++)? Do I have to go to a psychologist or a psychiatrist? Is my problem beyond repair? Thanks in advance, Eduardo León

                                If you can play The Dance of Eternity (Dream Theater), then we shall make a band.

                                G Offline
                                G Offline
                                Geoff_GTV
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #22

                                Learning C and being able to switch freely between Decimal, Hexadecimal and Octal etc. have certainly affected things... I once joined in a game of Canasta with my parents and found that I kept making runs of 8, 9, jack... leaving out the 10. - I thought I must be going mad, until I realised my mind was now thnking in base 13 instead of base 10. Maybe I should invent a game of Binary Domainos or something!

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                                • 0 0x3c0

                                  You're no alone there. I've tried to press the power button by clicking on it. Fortunately nobody saw :doh:

                                  OSDev

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                                  U Offline
                                  uXuf
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #23

                                  I've frequently reached for Ctrl+F while going through those endless classified lists for jobs :sigh:

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                                  • L leonej_dt

                                    Hello, everybody: First of all, excuse me for this extremely weird thing I'm going to say. I have the following problem: My favorite programming language, C++, is affecting the way I think in real life. I tend to assume other people have the ability (not to mention the willingness) to make huge abstractions when I talk to them. I expect them to be able to distinguish between a thing being referred and the reference itself. My ability to communicate my thoughts to the people I live, work and am supposed to have fun with is severely impaired by the fact most of these thoughts are "constructed" using concepts understandable only to C++ lawyers. Has anybody experienced a similar thing (not necessarily with C++)? Do I have to go to a psychologist or a psychiatrist? Is my problem beyond repair? Thanks in advance, Eduardo León

                                    If you can play The Dance of Eternity (Dream Theater), then we shall make a band.

                                    J Offline
                                    J Offline
                                    Job86
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #24

                                    Does tapping the compile shortcut in a word document count? :P

                                    J 1 Reply Last reply
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                                    • L leonej_dt

                                      Hello, everybody: First of all, excuse me for this extremely weird thing I'm going to say. I have the following problem: My favorite programming language, C++, is affecting the way I think in real life. I tend to assume other people have the ability (not to mention the willingness) to make huge abstractions when I talk to them. I expect them to be able to distinguish between a thing being referred and the reference itself. My ability to communicate my thoughts to the people I live, work and am supposed to have fun with is severely impaired by the fact most of these thoughts are "constructed" using concepts understandable only to C++ lawyers. Has anybody experienced a similar thing (not necessarily with C++)? Do I have to go to a psychologist or a psychiatrist? Is my problem beyond repair? Thanks in advance, Eduardo León

                                      If you can play The Dance of Eternity (Dream Theater), then we shall make a band.

                                      M Offline
                                      M Offline
                                      megaadam
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #25

                                      I daresay thirty years of assembly programming has not incremented xor inverted my thoughs by a single unsigned bit.

                                      ........................ Life is too shor

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                                      • U User 3824460

                                        Not programming language actually.. But once, I was sitting next to the computer and scribbling something on paper. I made a mistake on paper and was trying to correct it by hitting CTRL + Z on the keyboard ;P

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                                        B Offline
                                        blackjack2150
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #26

                                        A friend of mine had to write the same sentence twince on a piece of paper for an exam, so he wrote it the first time and then he underlined it to select it. He then realised he had no CTRL, C and V keys on the sheet of paper. :)

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                                        • V Vikram A Punathambekar

                                          leonej_dt wrote:

                                          First of all, excuse me for this extremely weird thing I'm going to say.

                                          Since when did weirdness have to be excused in the Lounge? ;P

                                          leonej_dt wrote:

                                          Has any programming language ever affected your thought process in real life?

                                          No.

                                          Cheers, Vikram. (Cracked not one CCC, but two!)

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                                          Rage
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #27

                                          Vikram A Punathambekar wrote:

                                          No.

                                          Really ? Never ever ? Even never made an analogy such as "Yes, in programming, this would be a base class, these would be derived from it, and you could access the whole through this interface. In your case, the interface would be this and this...." ? Happens to me all the time.

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