As the saying goes, there’s only two hard problems in IT:
Caching, naming things, and off by one errors.
As the saying goes, there’s only two hard problems in IT:
Caching, naming things, and off by one errors.
you’re on a highway to hell.
I agree with you especially on the definition order of functions. I, too, define main()
first.
let the chaos reign
There’s a few problems:
My father. He’s just a fine dude. Does a lot of things right, is never angry at anybody for too long, and just generally understands what’s important in life and why.
The brain structures develop to help us navigate through the environment. So of course, at times where an inner monologue is helpful, we will probably have one.
It’s fascinating to me, too.
I have seen everything by now: People who think that only sociopaths have an inner monologue. People who think an inner monologue would be useful, but can’t quite lean in on the concept. People who are confused that some people don’t have an inner monologue. People getting angry at me for even “questioning” the inner monologue, as if it was holy.
How to write spaghetti code:
I think that we have a perception bias towards things that interest us.
Since the elements in the top-right corner (C, O, N, P, S, Si, Fe, Al, Na, …) are interesting to us, that’s what we typically look at. And in that region, things are fairly balanced. It’s only in the regions where we don’t typically look, where we said “let’s just make it all metal so the categorization is done, call it a day, and move on”. I think.
This reminds me a bit of this photo:
We thought the data was forever, but somehow not so.
If you have no money, and throw away all of it, you still have no money.
Nicht direkt heißes Wasser auf die kalten Hände geben. Stattdessen erst mal lauwarmes.
Yes they are. Capitalism brain-rot has infected most of US workforce today.
Two plates of rice or noodles with vegetables and salmon. Delicious. Actually, highest ROI that you could possibly hope to achieve in the universe.