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Try....Catch

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csharp
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  • C codejet

    Its a compliment. Jus checked out your profile. I am 30, was thinking of quitting programming at 35. Programming nowadays is associated with socially awkward 20-something years old individuals. I am not that anymore. After seeing your I am thinking of sticking around beyond 35 may be yo should too. You don't look like you have reached retirement age.

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    R Offline
    Ravi Bhavnani
    wrote on last edited by
    #29

    codejet wrote:

    Programming nowadays is associated with socially awkward 20-something years old individuals.

    You must watch a lot of TV. :) /ravi

    My new year resolution: 2048 x 1536 Home | Articles | My .NET bits | Freeware ravib(at)ravib(dot)com

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    • C codejet

      Working for a small IT firm I was not making much progress on a project using VB.NET so my boss who was once a programmer (VB6) decided to do some pair programming with me. We googled some code that had a try..catch block, the dude had no idea that the "Try" part was part of the code. He thought the author was saying i should try the code below. I stopped straight away and told him to go back to his office. Guess I should have asked what he thought the catch part was for. My advice to all owners of all small software development firms ; have some idea of what technologies and programming languages your employees are using to make all those products that bring in all that money for you.Dont emabarass yourself!

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      dandy72
      wrote on last edited by
      #30

      codejet wrote:

      My advice to all owners of all small software development firms ; have some idea of what technologies and programming languages your employees are using

      Depends on the level of his/her involvement. If my boss isn't coding, I'd rather have him stay out of it altogether than have him "know enough to be dangerous".

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      • C codejet

        Working for a small IT firm I was not making much progress on a project using VB.NET so my boss who was once a programmer (VB6) decided to do some pair programming with me. We googled some code that had a try..catch block, the dude had no idea that the "Try" part was part of the code. He thought the author was saying i should try the code below. I stopped straight away and told him to go back to his office. Guess I should have asked what he thought the catch part was for. My advice to all owners of all small software development firms ; have some idea of what technologies and programming languages your employees are using to make all those products that bring in all that money for you.Dont emabarass yourself!

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        jschell
        wrote on last edited by
        #31

        codejet wrote:

        My advice to all owners of all small software development firms ; have some idea of what technologies and programming languages your employees are using to make all those products that bring in all that money for you.Dont emabarass yourself!

        Myself I prefer that they have a great deal of knowledge about how to sell the product and hire those that can also sell it. And that they are successful in both of those. And then stay out of my way and make sure I get paid.

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        • P PIEBALDconsult

          Slacker007 wrote:

          surgeon, or the patient

          I thought it was dog or fire hydrant.

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          _Damian S_
          wrote on last edited by
          #32

          PIEBALDconsult wrote:

          I thought it was dog or fire hydrant.

          Some days you're the pigeon, some days you're the statue!! Sometimes you get the elevator... usually you get the shaft!!

          Quad skating his way through the world since the early 80's... Booger Mobile - My bright green 1964 Ford Falcon - check out the blog here!! | If you feel generous - make a donation to Camp Quality!!

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          • C codejet

            Working for a small IT firm I was not making much progress on a project using VB.NET so my boss who was once a programmer (VB6) decided to do some pair programming with me. We googled some code that had a try..catch block, the dude had no idea that the "Try" part was part of the code. He thought the author was saying i should try the code below. I stopped straight away and told him to go back to his office. Guess I should have asked what he thought the catch part was for. My advice to all owners of all small software development firms ; have some idea of what technologies and programming languages your employees are using to make all those products that bring in all that money for you.Dont emabarass yourself!

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            Mycroft Holmes
            wrote on last edited by
            #33

            I tell my boss the reason I took the team to c# was so he would no longer understand the syntax and could not interfere! Works too, he gets horribly frustrated when he peers over the shoulder of one of the developers and can't understand the syntax. The real reason is that there is more support for c# on the interwebs!

            Never underestimate the power of human stupidity RAH

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            • C codejet

              Working for a small IT firm I was not making much progress on a project using VB.NET so my boss who was once a programmer (VB6) decided to do some pair programming with me. We googled some code that had a try..catch block, the dude had no idea that the "Try" part was part of the code. He thought the author was saying i should try the code below. I stopped straight away and told him to go back to his office. Guess I should have asked what he thought the catch part was for. My advice to all owners of all small software development firms ; have some idea of what technologies and programming languages your employees are using to make all those products that bring in all that money for you.Dont emabarass yourself!

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              englebart
              wrote on last edited by
              #34

              I worked on a small team that had a boss like that. Our worse nightmare was to walk in on Monday morning and see the boss's sleep-deprived face. "I just got a new feature almost working this weekend, I am sure that one of you can finish this off by lunch time." Meanwhile, various interactions broke four other modules in the system. Aarrgh!

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              • C codejet

                Working for a small IT firm I was not making much progress on a project using VB.NET so my boss who was once a programmer (VB6) decided to do some pair programming with me. We googled some code that had a try..catch block, the dude had no idea that the "Try" part was part of the code. He thought the author was saying i should try the code below. I stopped straight away and told him to go back to his office. Guess I should have asked what he thought the catch part was for. My advice to all owners of all small software development firms ; have some idea of what technologies and programming languages your employees are using to make all those products that bring in all that money for you.Dont emabarass yourself!

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                penguinman573
                wrote on last edited by
                #35

                A useful DotNet error handling structure that you could have explained to him in five minutes. I dislike when 'knowledge of particular language syntax' is confused with 'programming ability'. It's like if Einstein asked you what some english word meant, so you assume he is an idiot. I wonder who is designing the GUI, and defining the functionality of your application.. eg all the stuff that can be done before you start typing code... eg 90% of the software design.

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                • A Amarnath S

                  Per this[^], exceptions came to C++ sometime around the early nineties. However, C++ was in existence at least ten years before that. Your boss may have worked on the early versions of C++, which did not have exceptions.

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                  patbob
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #36

                  Thanks for posting this. I didn't think try-catch was originally part of C++, but was going crazy trying to remember clearly that far back since I couldn't find anything about it. As I recall it wasn't even part of MS's C++ compiler at first, although they did have macro (?) extensions that implemented it.

                  We can program with only 1's, but if all you've got are zeros, you've got nothing.

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                  • P penguinman573

                    A useful DotNet error handling structure that you could have explained to him in five minutes. I dislike when 'knowledge of particular language syntax' is confused with 'programming ability'. It's like if Einstein asked you what some english word meant, so you assume he is an idiot. I wonder who is designing the GUI, and defining the functionality of your application.. eg all the stuff that can be done before you start typing code... eg 90% of the software design.

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                    codejet
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #37

                    I would have explained to him had he asked. I am not bragging about my programming abilities. I honestly think my boss is a better programmer than me. However he is so out of touch with how I do what he instructs me to do . I am 100% comfortable with this....i think my job is very secure. He should just stop disturbing me thats all. I would explained to him the syntax in 5 minutes but that would have encouraged him to continue disturbing me. By the way I do not think your Einstein analogy is appropriate for this situation.

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                    • P PIEBALDconsult

                      "Well, you can try this code, but the catch is that it swallows Exceptions."

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                      KP Lee
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #38

                      Boss: What's Exceptions? Answer: messages about errors. Boss: Well, just don't write errors in code and you don't need Exceptions, problem solved.

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                      • C codejet

                        You have a way with words. You will be a boss in the near future. You are like a puppy that has swallowed a dictionary. Thats not my line got it from Dilbert, I am not sure its his line either.

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                        KP Lee
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #39

                        codejet wrote:

                        Thats not my line got it from Dilbert, I am not sure its his line either.

                        I can categorically state that is not from Dilbert because fictional characters don't create anything. :laugh:

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                        • P PIEBALDconsult

                          Then it's good thing I can't produce a laminar flow.

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                          KP Lee
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #40

                          PIEBALDconsult wrote:

                          Then it's good thing I can't produce a laminar flow.

                          I doubt a fire hydrant is designed to do that either. Put the flow in a slightly inclined trough and you could produce one too.

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                          • C codejet

                            I would have explained to him had he asked. I am not bragging about my programming abilities. I honestly think my boss is a better programmer than me. However he is so out of touch with how I do what he instructs me to do . I am 100% comfortable with this....i think my job is very secure. He should just stop disturbing me thats all. I would explained to him the syntax in 5 minutes but that would have encouraged him to continue disturbing me. By the way I do not think your Einstein analogy is appropriate for this situation.

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                            KP Lee
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #41

                            codejet wrote:

                            I do not think your Einstein analogy is appropriate for this situation.

                            I doubt there was any comparison to Einstein directly, everyone has blind spots where they aren't the best and that analogy seemed appropriate to me here.

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                            • C codejet

                              Working for a small IT firm I was not making much progress on a project using VB.NET so my boss who was once a programmer (VB6) decided to do some pair programming with me. We googled some code that had a try..catch block, the dude had no idea that the "Try" part was part of the code. He thought the author was saying i should try the code below. I stopped straight away and told him to go back to his office. Guess I should have asked what he thought the catch part was for. My advice to all owners of all small software development firms ; have some idea of what technologies and programming languages your employees are using to make all those products that bring in all that money for you.Dont emabarass yourself!

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                              C Offline
                              Chad3F
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #42

                              Perhaps you just need a programing language with layman's syntax:

                              fish
                              {
                              ...
                              }
                              catch(e)
                              {
                              // Cleanup
                              ...

                              // Propagate error
                              e.release()
                              }

                              :)

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