What's more boring than two devs in a code review?
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A book about a mathematician who discovers a theorem... Birth of a Theorem: A Mathematical Adventure: Villani, Cédric, DeBevoise, Malcolm[^] Author is winner of coveted and honored Fields Medal in Mathematics. Finally, Code Reviews seem like huge fun now. I also like to watch ice melt at room temperature or at other times I like watching paint dry, if it's not too fast. The thing that will draw you in is the regularity for the inhomogeneous Boltzmann. And, I'm not talking about modulo minimal regularity bounds. I'm talking about unconditional and not even in a perturbative framework. :rolleyes:
―Nassim Nicholas Taleb, author of The Black Swan said of the book,
“Riveting! A gem.”
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A book about a mathematician who discovers a theorem... Birth of a Theorem: A Mathematical Adventure: Villani, Cédric, DeBevoise, Malcolm[^] Author is winner of coveted and honored Fields Medal in Mathematics. Finally, Code Reviews seem like huge fun now. I also like to watch ice melt at room temperature or at other times I like watching paint dry, if it's not too fast. The thing that will draw you in is the regularity for the inhomogeneous Boltzmann. And, I'm not talking about modulo minimal regularity bounds. I'm talking about unconditional and not even in a perturbative framework. :rolleyes:
―Nassim Nicholas Taleb, author of The Black Swan said of the book,
“Riveting! A gem.”
Hey... see the positive side... you won't need to take meds for insomnia problems from now on... :laugh:
M.D.V. ;) If something has a solution... Why do we have to worry about?. If it has no solution... For what reason do we have to worry about? Help me to understand what I'm saying, and I'll explain it better to you Rating helpful answers is nice, but saying thanks can be even nicer.
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A book about a mathematician who discovers a theorem... Birth of a Theorem: A Mathematical Adventure: Villani, Cédric, DeBevoise, Malcolm[^] Author is winner of coveted and honored Fields Medal in Mathematics. Finally, Code Reviews seem like huge fun now. I also like to watch ice melt at room temperature or at other times I like watching paint dry, if it's not too fast. The thing that will draw you in is the regularity for the inhomogeneous Boltzmann. And, I'm not talking about modulo minimal regularity bounds. I'm talking about unconditional and not even in a perturbative framework. :rolleyes:
―Nassim Nicholas Taleb, author of The Black Swan said of the book,
“Riveting! A gem.”
My team's code reviews: Me: You followed our Standards? He: Yes. Me: Well alright then, ship it.
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Hey... see the positive side... you won't need to take meds for insomnia problems from now on... :laugh:
M.D.V. ;) If something has a solution... Why do we have to worry about?. If it has no solution... For what reason do we have to worry about? Help me to understand what I'm saying, and I'll explain it better to you Rating helpful answers is nice, but saying thanks can be even nicer.
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My team's code reviews: Me: You followed our Standards? He: Yes. Me: Well alright then, ship it.
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My team's code reviews: Me: You followed our Standards? He: Yes. Me: Well alright then, ship it.
Large nameless corporation wrote:
Our team's code reviews: PM: You changed all the icons? Pion: Yes. PM: Well alright then, ship it.
Software rusts. Simon Stephenson, ca 1994. So does this signature. me, 2012
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A book about a mathematician who discovers a theorem... Birth of a Theorem: A Mathematical Adventure: Villani, Cédric, DeBevoise, Malcolm[^] Author is winner of coveted and honored Fields Medal in Mathematics. Finally, Code Reviews seem like huge fun now. I also like to watch ice melt at room temperature or at other times I like watching paint dry, if it's not too fast. The thing that will draw you in is the regularity for the inhomogeneous Boltzmann. And, I'm not talking about modulo minimal regularity bounds. I'm talking about unconditional and not even in a perturbative framework. :rolleyes:
―Nassim Nicholas Taleb, author of The Black Swan said of the book,
“Riveting! A gem.”
Having 1 hour useless meeting every workday that I don't care about and talk about 20 seconds in each... :( Starting to use my phone usefully during meetings! :D
A new .NET Serializer All in one Menu-Ribbon Bar Taking over the world since 1371!
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A book about a mathematician who discovers a theorem... Birth of a Theorem: A Mathematical Adventure: Villani, Cédric, DeBevoise, Malcolm[^] Author is winner of coveted and honored Fields Medal in Mathematics. Finally, Code Reviews seem like huge fun now. I also like to watch ice melt at room temperature or at other times I like watching paint dry, if it's not too fast. The thing that will draw you in is the regularity for the inhomogeneous Boltzmann. And, I'm not talking about modulo minimal regularity bounds. I'm talking about unconditional and not even in a perturbative framework. :rolleyes:
―Nassim Nicholas Taleb, author of The Black Swan said of the book,
“Riveting! A gem.”
having 12 devs in the room that can not agree on a single coding standard
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having 12 devs in the room that can not agree on a single coding standard
Sarcastic, back stabbing, and mean spirited maybe, but not boring. :)
"the debugger doesn't tell me anything because this code compiles just fine" - random QA comment "Facebook is where you tell lies to your friends. Twitter is where you tell the truth to strangers." - chriselst "I don't drink any more... then again, I don't drink any less." - Mike Mullikins uncle
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A book about a mathematician who discovers a theorem... Birth of a Theorem: A Mathematical Adventure: Villani, Cédric, DeBevoise, Malcolm[^] Author is winner of coveted and honored Fields Medal in Mathematics. Finally, Code Reviews seem like huge fun now. I also like to watch ice melt at room temperature or at other times I like watching paint dry, if it's not too fast. The thing that will draw you in is the regularity for the inhomogeneous Boltzmann. And, I'm not talking about modulo minimal regularity bounds. I'm talking about unconditional and not even in a perturbative framework. :rolleyes:
―Nassim Nicholas Taleb, author of The Black Swan said of the book,
“Riveting! A gem.”
Quote:
The thing that will draw you in is the regularity for the inhomogeneous Boltzmann. And, I'm not talking about modulo minimal regularity bounds. I'm talking about unconditional and not even in a perturbative framework.
Reminds me of a book I used to have about abstract algebras. Every time I was feeling too smart for solving a really difficult problem, I would read a page from it and go: "Nah, still dumb!" ;P
Mircea
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Quote:
The thing that will draw you in is the regularity for the inhomogeneous Boltzmann. And, I'm not talking about modulo minimal regularity bounds. I'm talking about unconditional and not even in a perturbative framework.
Reminds me of a book I used to have about abstract algebras. Every time I was feeling too smart for solving a really difficult problem, I would read a page from it and go: "Nah, still dumb!" ;P
Mircea
Mircea Neacsu wrote:
Reminds me of a book I used to have about abstract algebras. Every time I was feeling too smart for solving a really difficult problem, I would read a page from it and go: "Nah, still dumb!"
That's hilarious. Really made me laugh out loud, because I have a book like that too and I'm just going through my annual reading of it (I only read about 2 pages of it every year). It's Donald Knuth's The Art of Computer Programming[^]. I was really motivated to get through a lot of it this year and then I got to the bottom of the 3rd page or so...
Knuth said:
Algorithm E may, for example, be formalized in these terms as follows: Let Q be the set of all singletons (n), all ordered pairs (m, n), and all ordered quadruples (m, n, r, 1), (m, n, r, 2), and (m, n, p, 3), where m, n, and p are positive integers and r is a nonnegative integer. Let I be the subset of all pairs (m, n) and let Ω be the subset of all singletons (n). Let f be defined as follows:
:-O :-O :sigh: