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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

    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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              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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              • 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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                Lost User
                wrote on last edited by
                #27

                ... someone says: "Why do you always have to be so logical ???!!!!". :doh: (True story).

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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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                  Ken_Holt
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #28

                  Back in the mid-70's I had a friend who did a lot of work with machine code on DEC minicomputers. One day he used his lunch break to go to the bank to straighten out a problem he had been having with his checking account. It turns out that he had been trying to balance his checkbook in octal.

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