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  3. You know you've been coding too much when...

You know you've been coding too much when...

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delphi
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  • J Jacquers

    You dream about writing code. And not even in your current coding language, but Turbo Pascal. It was a good language to learn programming in, but things took a long time to do compared to what we have available now. I'd be able to write something in a day that would have taken a week to do back then.

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    CalvinHobbies
    wrote on last edited by
    #7

    I've dreamed coding :zzz: .. alot of nights actually. It's much better than dreaming fantasy video games (and safer). You know you've been programming too much when you start speaking in statements (ie; "if ... than ..else.. ) Done that a few times. Not a programming one, but you know you've been using your blackberry too much when you hold down a key on the keyboard and wonder why it's not capitalizing. you know you have been gaming and doing too much game development when you go outside and think " hmm, nice graphics". ( or think about how to vector it). when people ask you something and you don't know, you reply " num=1; "with a blank stare.

    ///////////////// -Negative, I am a meat popsicle.

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    • R Roger Wright

      I could do in a day, back then, what it now takes a month to do with modern languages. If Turbo Pascal had held the course, instead of fizzling out after v5.5, I might still be a programmer. It was easy to read, write, and maintain, well documented, extremely efficient, and fairly priced. Microsoft changed all of those facets of an entire industry, and all of us are poorer for it. That's not to say that a bunch of good people aren't doing very nicely financially as a result, of course. :-D

      Will Rogers never met me.

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      Jacquers
      wrote on last edited by
      #8

      I feel like that with mvvm. I see the benefits of seperation of logic and things being loosely coupled, but it takes a lot longer than plain old code behind. It also feels a bit 'obfuscated' since you have to know mvvm to figure out just how things fit together.

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      • J Jacquers

        You dream about writing code. And not even in your current coding language, but Turbo Pascal. It was a good language to learn programming in, but things took a long time to do compared to what we have available now. I'd be able to write something in a day that would have taken a week to do back then.

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        V Offline
        V 0
        wrote on last edited by
        #9

        During uni we still had COBOL. Got a nightmare two years in a row the night before the exam about COBOL code passing through. A small reminder, for COBOL you needed to divide the code in sections and start writing on the seventh character. For calculating values you needed to write "compute ... " etc... X|

        V.

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        • R Roger Wright

          I could do in a day, back then, what it now takes a month to do with modern languages. If Turbo Pascal had held the course, instead of fizzling out after v5.5, I might still be a programmer. It was easy to read, write, and maintain, well documented, extremely efficient, and fairly priced. Microsoft changed all of those facets of an entire industry, and all of us are poorer for it. That's not to say that a bunch of good people aren't doing very nicely financially as a result, of course. :-D

          Will Rogers never met me.

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          BobJanova
          wrote on last edited by
          #10

          Turbo Pascal begat Delphi, and while a purist might have complained at that move, Delphi retained most of those advantages that you describe there.

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          • B BobJanova

            Turbo Pascal begat Delphi, and while a purist might have complained at that move, Delphi retained most of those advantages that you describe there.

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            Roger Wright
            wrote on last edited by
            #11

            Most, but not all, especially the price. :-D I couldn't afford to continue using it, especially considering that the wind was blowing Microsoft's direction...

            Will Rogers never met me.

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            • R Roger Wright

              Good god - you, too? I've been doing that since I was sixteen, and wishing I had 16 fingers to make it easier to handle large numbers. We didn't have calculators then, just these soft, heavy, and somewhat slimy clay tablets. I had to invent the wheel just to carry my books to school... I must admit that, although my first prototype using squares didn't work out too well, further refinements utilizing more sides in the polygon theme worked out a little better. Still, my early beta testers reported amazing weight loss results from using my prototype design, so it wasn't a complete failure.

              Will Rogers never met me.

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              Steve Mayfield
              wrote on last edited by
              #12

              and here I thought the roundness was caused by the natural wear and tear of pushing the cart with the square wheels. ;)

              Steve _________________ I C(++) therefore I am

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              • V V 0

                During uni we still had COBOL. Got a nightmare two years in a row the night before the exam about COBOL code passing through. A small reminder, for COBOL you needed to divide the code in sections and start writing on the seventh character. For calculating values you needed to write "compute ... " etc... X|

                V.

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                Vivi Chellappa
                wrote on last edited by
                #13

                V. wrote:

                For calculating values you needed to write "compute ... " etc...

                Not necessarily. You could say ADD A TO B GIVING C or COMPUTE C = A + B You have forgotten your COBOL! :laugh:

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                • V Vivi Chellappa

                  V. wrote:

                  For calculating values you needed to write "compute ... " etc...

                  Not necessarily. You could say ADD A TO B GIVING C or COMPUTE C = A + B You have forgotten your COBOL! :laugh:

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                  V Offline
                  V 0
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #14

                  Damn you of reminding me the forgotten words ! May your corps rot in hell for all eternity. :-D

                  V.

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                  • J Jacquers

                    You dream about writing code. And not even in your current coding language, but Turbo Pascal. It was a good language to learn programming in, but things took a long time to do compared to what we have available now. I'd be able to write something in a day that would have taken a week to do back then.

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                    Member 2053006
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #15

                    While coding you finish your prawns, start on the grapes and only notice by the third or fourth grape that you are still dipping them in the seafood dip.

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                    • J Jacquers

                      You dream about writing code. And not even in your current coding language, but Turbo Pascal. It was a good language to learn programming in, but things took a long time to do compared to what we have available now. I'd be able to write something in a day that would have taken a week to do back then.

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                      BubingaMan
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #16

                      Jacquers wrote:

                      You dream about writing code

                      Back when I was working on a framework day and night, I once woke up in sweat in the middle of the night. I dreamed that I was an object that got lost in the framework. It was pretty strange. :-)

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                      • V Vivi Chellappa

                        V. wrote:

                        For calculating values you needed to write "compute ... " etc...

                        Not necessarily. You could say ADD A TO B GIVING C or COMPUTE C = A + B You have forgotten your COBOL! :laugh:

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                        BubingaMan
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #17

                        Vivic wrote:

                        You could say ADD A TO B GIVING C or
                        COMPUTE C = A + B

                        OMG, I really did not need to see that. :laugh:

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                        • J Jacquers

                          I feel like that with mvvm. I see the benefits of seperation of logic and things being loosely coupled, but it takes a lot longer than plain old code behind. It also feels a bit 'obfuscated' since you have to know mvvm to figure out just how things fit together.

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                          BubingaMan
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #18

                          Jacquers wrote:

                          but it takes a lot longer than plain old code behind

                          Perhaps. But consider needing to dive back into that code after 2 years to deal with a change request or a bugfix. I'll take the nicely structured code of MVVM over the spaghetti that is code-behind any day of the week. Not to mention that writing tests for the GUI layer is loads more efficient if you decouple the logic from the actual GUI.

                          Jacquers wrote:

                          It also feels a bit 'obfuscated' since you have to know mvvm to figure out just how things fit together.

                          Yes, to understand MVVM code, you need working knowledge of the MVVM pattern. Seems kinda obvious.

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                          • J Jacquers

                            You dream about writing code. And not even in your current coding language, but Turbo Pascal. It was a good language to learn programming in, but things took a long time to do compared to what we have available now. I'd be able to write something in a day that would have taken a week to do back then.

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                            MajinSaha
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #19

                            Before you go to bed, you put two glasses near you. One filled with water in case you get thirsty in a middle of a night. The other one empty, in case you don't get thirsty.

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                            • V V 0

                              During uni we still had COBOL. Got a nightmare two years in a row the night before the exam about COBOL code passing through. A small reminder, for COBOL you needed to divide the code in sections and start writing on the seventh character. For calculating values you needed to write "compute ... " etc... X|

                              V.

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                              carlospc1970
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #20

                              IDENTIFICATION DIVISION

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                              • J Jacquers

                                I feel like that with mvvm. I see the benefits of seperation of logic and things being loosely coupled, but it takes a lot longer than plain old code behind. It also feels a bit 'obfuscated' since you have to know mvvm to figure out just how things fit together.

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                                DannyStaten
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #21

                                Give it time and you will find that MVVM can be developed with similar costs in time. One of the benefits I love about MVVM is how reusable things are. If you can't do something via databinding to an existing property on a control, then you extend the control in question and add the properties you need. If you do it that way you then have a control you can use everywhere. Doing things in code behind which feels quicker ultimately can cost you more time.

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                                • J Jacquers

                                  You dream about writing code. And not even in your current coding language, but Turbo Pascal. It was a good language to learn programming in, but things took a long time to do compared to what we have available now. I'd be able to write something in a day that would have taken a week to do back then.

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                                  Owen37
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #22

                                  When you dream about, not writing code, but BEING code. The curly-braces are ticklish :laugh: --Owen

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                                  • R Roger Wright

                                    I could do in a day, back then, what it now takes a month to do with modern languages. If Turbo Pascal had held the course, instead of fizzling out after v5.5, I might still be a programmer. It was easy to read, write, and maintain, well documented, extremely efficient, and fairly priced. Microsoft changed all of those facets of an entire industry, and all of us are poorer for it. That's not to say that a bunch of good people aren't doing very nicely financially as a result, of course. :-D

                                    Will Rogers never met me.

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                                    User 8274150
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #23

                                    SO you never considered Delphi?

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                                    • J Jacquers

                                      You dream about writing code. And not even in your current coding language, but Turbo Pascal. It was a good language to learn programming in, but things took a long time to do compared to what we have available now. I'd be able to write something in a day that would have taken a week to do back then.

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                                      Fabio Franco
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #24

                                      I realized that I code too much for several reasons: 1 - As others, I sometimes dream of coding 2 - On free time, I sometimes think of code 3 - Most importantly, the way I think has changed. The decisions I take in my life have become just like logical algorithms, sometimes I even think on the way of case's, if's and while's. Scary thought.

                                      "To alcohol! The cause of, and solution to, all of life's problems" - Homer Simpson

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                                      • J Jacquers

                                        You dream about writing code. And not even in your current coding language, but Turbo Pascal. It was a good language to learn programming in, but things took a long time to do compared to what we have available now. I'd be able to write something in a day that would have taken a week to do back then.

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                                        Narud Shiro
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #25

                                        You want to end every line of text with a semicolon (;), without matter if you're writing T-SQL, HTML, Visual Basic, a letter, an email, or anything else :-D

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                                        • J Jacquers

                                          You dream about writing code. And not even in your current coding language, but Turbo Pascal. It was a good language to learn programming in, but things took a long time to do compared to what we have available now. I'd be able to write something in a day that would have taken a week to do back then.

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                                          M Offline
                                          Member 3980709
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #26

                                          ... when you try to debug your deli sandwich in which you found a bug... :-\

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