Horror people
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Sometimes I ask myself. What’s the real horror in this rubric? The people that wrote the code or the people that are posting it and reading it? I think the last ones. Did you ever see on the internet a website where plumbers are smiling with the mistakes of “newbie’s” plumbers? In my company we have a positive approach. Dirk ApTools.Net
a.p@pandora.be wrote:
Did you ever see on the internet a website where plumbers are smiling with the mistakes of “newbie’s” plumbers?
Hm... after few minutes of search: http://www.selfhelpforums.com/forumdisplay.php?f=88[^]
Construction Horror Stories Witness or heard of a Construction Nightmare. Rather it be construction, electrical, or plumbing, this is the place to tell us !
Mostly, when you see programmers, they aren't doing anything. One of the attractive things about programmers is that you cannot tell whether or not they are working simply by looking at them. Very often they're sitting there seemingly drinking coffee and gossiping, or just staring into space. What the programmer is trying to do is get a handle on all the individual and unrelated ideas that are scampering around in his head. (Charles M Strauss)
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Imaging!! Imaging!! Your brother, wife or sun comes home from his first workday. You ask him. "How was your day?" and he answerd disapointed. " I made a stupid mistake. You can read it on the internet in the codeproject site, it’s a site with 4,848,546 members and growing! " This is real horror Dirk APTools
If they learned it was a mistake then it was good, but the problem is most codding horror stories/sites I look at are the ones where people "found" the code in a project they were working on and wasn't written by themselves/current coworkers. I'm sure if the poster would have know the author they would just inform them of the mistake. Unless it is something so bad that you can't forgive so easily... IE causes someone who knows what they are doing weeks of work to rewirte the code for the "fix"... Maybe is just because we coders are such bitter people and we must laugh at those lesser than us ;) nah that never happens :~
-Spacix All your skynet questions[^] belong to solved
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Sometimes I ask myself. What’s the real horror in this rubric? The people that wrote the code or the people that are posting it and reading it? I think the last ones. Did you ever see on the internet a website where plumbers are smiling with the mistakes of “newbie’s” plumbers? In my company we have a positive approach. Dirk ApTools.Net
You've made a bad assumption yourself. Why is it just the "newbie's" write bad code?? I've seen more than a few so-called "professionals" writing bad code for bad reasons. Now THAT'S the sickening, yet amusing, reason why this forum exists. Out of curiosity, do you stand outside the offices of "The Daily WTF" and protest their entire existance too?
A guide to posting questions on CodeProject[^]
Dave Kreskowiak Microsoft MVP Visual Developer - Visual Basic
2006, 2007 -
You've made a bad assumption yourself. Why is it just the "newbie's" write bad code?? I've seen more than a few so-called "professionals" writing bad code for bad reasons. Now THAT'S the sickening, yet amusing, reason why this forum exists. Out of curiosity, do you stand outside the offices of "The Daily WTF" and protest their entire existance too?
A guide to posting questions on CodeProject[^]
Dave Kreskowiak Microsoft MVP Visual Developer - Visual Basic
2006, 2007No not at all. But this rubric is a little bit shooting on the little soldiers. Even a professional programmer is little fisch. Who never wrote a bad piece of code? Maybe in an 'emergency situation' If you see it out of the context it can be very strange? For me a rubric like 'Horror Managers' , 'Horror Architect' is perfect possible. Dirk
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No not at all. But this rubric is a little bit shooting on the little soldiers. Even a professional programmer is little fisch. Who never wrote a bad piece of code? Maybe in an 'emergency situation' If you see it out of the context it can be very strange? For me a rubric like 'Horror Managers' , 'Horror Architect' is perfect possible. Dirk
a.p@pandora.be wrote:
Who never wrote a bad piece of code?
Everyone writes bad code at some time in their life. Most of us weed it out before it gets into a production environment!
A guide to posting questions on CodeProject[^]
Dave Kreskowiak Microsoft MVP Visual Developer - Visual Basic
2006, 2007 -
Sometimes I ask myself. What’s the real horror in this rubric? The people that wrote the code or the people that are posting it and reading it? I think the last ones. Did you ever see on the internet a website where plumbers are smiling with the mistakes of “newbie’s” plumbers? In my company we have a positive approach. Dirk ApTools.Net
The first post on this forum, if I remember correctly, was from me, and the horror I posted was my own. Either way, when people write bad code, it's not 'positive' to look the other way, it's positive to examine it, discuss it and learn from it.
Christian Graus - Microsoft MVP - C++ "also I don't think "TranslateOneToTwoBillion OneHundredAndFortySevenMillion FourHundredAndEightyThreeThousand SixHundredAndFortySeven()" is a very good choice for a function name" - SpacixOne ( offering help to someone who really needed it ) ( spaces added for the benefit of people running at < 1280x1024 )
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No not at all. But this rubric is a little bit shooting on the little soldiers. Even a professional programmer is little fisch. Who never wrote a bad piece of code? Maybe in an 'emergency situation' If you see it out of the context it can be very strange? For me a rubric like 'Horror Managers' , 'Horror Architect' is perfect possible. Dirk
a.p@pandora.be wrote:
Who never wrote a bad piece of code? Maybe in an 'emergency situation' If you see it out of the context it can be very strange? For me a rubric like 'Horror Managers' , 'Horror Architect' is perfect possible.
In other words, you're happy to pick on others but scared if it could apply to you ?
Christian Graus - Microsoft MVP - C++ "also I don't think "TranslateOneToTwoBillion OneHundredAndFortySevenMillion FourHundredAndEightyThreeThousand SixHundredAndFortySeven()" is a very good choice for a function name" - SpacixOne ( offering help to someone who really needed it ) ( spaces added for the benefit of people running at < 1280x1024 )
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The first post on this forum, if I remember correctly, was from me, and the horror I posted was my own. Either way, when people write bad code, it's not 'positive' to look the other way, it's positive to examine it, discuss it and learn from it.
Christian Graus - Microsoft MVP - C++ "also I don't think "TranslateOneToTwoBillion OneHundredAndFortySevenMillion FourHundredAndEightyThreeThousand SixHundredAndFortySeven()" is a very good choice for a function name" - SpacixOne ( offering help to someone who really needed it ) ( spaces added for the benefit of people running at < 1280x1024 )
Christian Graus wrote:
and learn from it.
Hear hear! And this way many people can learn from one mistake. It doesn't matter who made the mistake as long as we all learn.
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Sometimes I ask myself. What’s the real horror in this rubric? The people that wrote the code or the people that are posting it and reading it? I think the last ones. Did you ever see on the internet a website where plumbers are smiling with the mistakes of “newbie’s” plumbers? In my company we have a positive approach. Dirk ApTools.Net
:zzz:
"That's the problem with a spell checker. It only helps with bad spelling, not stupidity." - Rob Graham
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...And posting the errors on the internet is the best way to make professionals from them????? Give the newbies a compliment or flowers when they do something good. New programmers will be born
Give them a few compliments and new programmers will be born? What, no dinner first?