Almost posted a question
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I laugh as mine was an "Inception" Ref. I don't know what's on their mind... :doh: Besides, I know alot of women that can and could some men to shame on some topics (including Geekin it out).
///////////////// Groucho Marx Those are my principles, if you don't like them… I have others.
All of a sudden I am wondering how this could go from getting an answer from a question to women... Oh wait, I just got an idea! Why don't women make any sense at all? *reads through the question* ...Crap! I still don't understand them! :( I guess I flawed wizz's method somewhat :rolleyes:
It's an OO world.
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Wow, I actually had my question typed up and was going to post in QA and I had exhausted google for a solution, but then as I went through everything I tried... I figured out how to resolve it. Literally as I was looking at the preview to my question. It was strange, when I was reading it I looked at the question from the view of an outsider, like I was looking at a stranger's question that was unrelated to what I was doing. Has anyone ever done this? I think I developed another technique for solving my own coding problems. After I confirm and implement this I will post as a tip ;)
"I have a theory that the truth is never told during the nine-to-five hours. " — Hunter S. Thompson
I don't ask questions very often at all, but in the past, I found that talking to a co-worker or posting on CP would cause me to find the answer. Something about breaking the problem down so a reader or hearer could understand it, I think, caused me to think it through a little deeper.
Christian Graus Driven to the arms of OSX by Vista. Read my blog to find out how I've worked around bugs in Microsoft tools and frameworks.
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Wow, I actually had my question typed up and was going to post in QA and I had exhausted google for a solution, but then as I went through everything I tried... I figured out how to resolve it. Literally as I was looking at the preview to my question. It was strange, when I was reading it I looked at the question from the view of an outsider, like I was looking at a stranger's question that was unrelated to what I was doing. Has anyone ever done this? I think I developed another technique for solving my own coding problems. After I confirm and implement this I will post as a tip ;)
"I have a theory that the truth is never told during the nine-to-five hours. " — Hunter S. Thompson
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We must go deeper... -_- :suss:
///////////////// Groucho Marx Those are my principles, if you don't like them… I have others.
Use gloves please... :rolleyes:
[www.tamelectromecanica.com] Robots, CNC and PLC machines for grinding and polishing.
modified on Friday, July 1, 2011 6:07 AM
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Wow, I actually had my question typed up and was going to post in QA and I had exhausted google for a solution, but then as I went through everything I tried... I figured out how to resolve it. Literally as I was looking at the preview to my question. It was strange, when I was reading it I looked at the question from the view of an outsider, like I was looking at a stranger's question that was unrelated to what I was doing. Has anyone ever done this? I think I developed another technique for solving my own coding problems. After I confirm and implement this I will post as a tip ;)
"I have a theory that the truth is never told during the nine-to-five hours. " — Hunter S. Thompson
How nice! now my answer will fall into the darkness as no question will take care of it... :sigh:
[www.tamelectromecanica.com] Robots, CNC and PLC machines for grinding and polishing.
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Wow, I actually had my question typed up and was going to post in QA and I had exhausted google for a solution, but then as I went through everything I tried... I figured out how to resolve it. Literally as I was looking at the preview to my question. It was strange, when I was reading it I looked at the question from the view of an outsider, like I was looking at a stranger's question that was unrelated to what I was doing. Has anyone ever done this? I think I developed another technique for solving my own coding problems. After I confirm and implement this I will post as a tip ;)
"I have a theory that the truth is never told during the nine-to-five hours. " — Hunter S. Thompson
You use a different part of your brain to write code than you do to write prose. One way I proof prose is to read it aloud. A lot of stumble gets found this way. Same kind of thing, I think. I sat with an author once while he was holding court at a coffee shop in Denver called Muddy's. Simon Hawke. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simon_Hawke[^] I was astonished to find that he spoke in the exact same way that he wrote. I pointed this out to him during the discussion and he gave me one of those WTF looks and said; "doesn't everyone?" I also note that he wrote about six books a year at that time but had almost no proofing. Piers Anthony was producing about 3 a year in the same time but I think they were doing the same amount of work. PA getting more money per word (no doubt) and SH getting more words to the public. Oh, I digressed.
_____________________________ Give a man a mug, he drinks for a day. Teach a man to mug...
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Wow, I actually had my question typed up and was going to post in QA and I had exhausted google for a solution, but then as I went through everything I tried... I figured out how to resolve it. Literally as I was looking at the preview to my question. It was strange, when I was reading it I looked at the question from the view of an outsider, like I was looking at a stranger's question that was unrelated to what I was doing. Has anyone ever done this? I think I developed another technique for solving my own coding problems. After I confirm and implement this I will post as a tip ;)
"I have a theory that the truth is never told during the nine-to-five hours. " — Hunter S. Thompson
No jokes from me, this time.
wizardzz wrote:
It was strange, when I was reading it I looked at the question from the view of an outsider, like I was looking at a stranger's question that was unrelated to what I was doing. Has anyone ever done this?
Stuff like this happens to me from time to time and it is weird. I, personally, believe that the solution to all problems (coding and in life), are right there in front of you. The problem is we usually don't see them for a while...sometimes never. When I am stuck with a coding problem or a design challenge, I look at the problem knowing that the answer is easy and it is right there in front of me...I just have to find it. It's like finding Waldo in a crowd. You know he is there, you just have to find him. My thoughts. Good post by the way. :thumbsup:
----------------------------- Just along for the ride. -----------------------------
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I don't ask questions very often at all, but in the past, I found that talking to a co-worker or posting on CP would cause me to find the answer. Something about breaking the problem down so a reader or hearer could understand it, I think, caused me to think it through a little deeper.
Christian Graus Driven to the arms of OSX by Vista. Read my blog to find out how I've worked around bugs in Microsoft tools and frameworks.
Yeah, I do feel like trying to formally word the issue for an outsider plays a huge part. It caused me to proof read it from the view of the audience, too, which helps get the brain working in a different way.
"I have a theory that the truth is never told during the nine-to-five hours. " — Hunter S. Thompson
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You use a different part of your brain to write code than you do to write prose. One way I proof prose is to read it aloud. A lot of stumble gets found this way. Same kind of thing, I think. I sat with an author once while he was holding court at a coffee shop in Denver called Muddy's. Simon Hawke. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simon_Hawke[^] I was astonished to find that he spoke in the exact same way that he wrote. I pointed this out to him during the discussion and he gave me one of those WTF looks and said; "doesn't everyone?" I also note that he wrote about six books a year at that time but had almost no proofing. Piers Anthony was producing about 3 a year in the same time but I think they were doing the same amount of work. PA getting more money per word (no doubt) and SH getting more words to the public. Oh, I digressed.
_____________________________ Give a man a mug, he drinks for a day. Teach a man to mug...
That is an observation I did not make. Viewing a coding problem, when worded into a word problem, as prose.
smcnulty2000 wrote:
I was astonished to find that he spoke in the exact same way that he wrote. I pointed this out to him during the discussion and he gave me one of those WTF looks and said; "doesn't everyone?"
That is incredibly interesting, I have only recently tried writing and feel I can't find my voice well. I should let my written words flow like how I speak. I have written stuff, that when I reread, feels clunky and unnatural. That is a sign I'm not writing in my own voice. I will definitely take advice from this.
"I have a theory that the truth is never told during the nine-to-five hours. " — Hunter S. Thompson
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That is an observation I did not make. Viewing a coding problem, when worded into a word problem, as prose.
smcnulty2000 wrote:
I was astonished to find that he spoke in the exact same way that he wrote. I pointed this out to him during the discussion and he gave me one of those WTF looks and said; "doesn't everyone?"
That is incredibly interesting, I have only recently tried writing and feel I can't find my voice well. I should let my written words flow like how I speak. I have written stuff, that when I reread, feels clunky and unnatural. That is a sign I'm not writing in my own voice. I will definitely take advice from this.
"I have a theory that the truth is never told during the nine-to-five hours. " — Hunter S. Thompson
wizardzz wrote:
, I have only recently tried writing and feel I can't find my voice well. I should let my written words flow like how I speak. I have written stuff, that when I reread, feels clunky and unnatural. That is a sign I'm not writing in my own voice.
I have the same problem. It is interesting that when I write in a forum I can form whole, cogent sentences and when I try and write fiction or whatever I sound like I just learnt english. :doh: I'm trying to fold the one attitude into the other to get my mind over the obvious psychological block. Something to do with the way I organize my thoughts when I'm approaching a forum reply, I think. Good luck with your struggle. Man vs self is a difficult one.
_____________________________ Give a man a mug, he drinks for a day. Teach a man to mug...