@Puppy The fact is that questions are on Stack Overflow
The answers are there, but it takes a master to string the correct material together to produce something coherent that those at a lower level and digest
You assume that people who can't learn from a book are "dumb." But alas! What if they have been poorly trained by their environment to learn from a book? It's not their fault. Even above average people in the wrong environment can be permanently gimped.
@DonLarynx I tried that approach once ("teaching stuff to people by writing stuff about programming"), and then found the people that needed it most didn't read it anyway, so yeah.
makes me think "pure information" is formless - it could be in the form of text, sound or visual. But that's the manifestation, not the information itself.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Many educational books are also intimately tied to the college system, at least here in the US, which is seen as stagnant and almost malicious with how they scrunge money out of their students.
@Cinch We don't have yet a single, unified, perfect medium that fits all people's needs, so a diversity of sources (books, wikis, Q&As, web stuff) are there. If you complain about quality in a source you prefer then that's where you should put your effort on.
I'm coding a toy calendar.
It contains this template meeting type:
#include <string>
#include <iostream>
#pragma once
using namespace std;
template <class T>
class Meeting_t
{
private:
T startTime;
T endTime;
string subject;
public:
Meeting_t(){
...
@milleniumbug I think I like EPUB. But even that takes extra effort. Never heard of MOBI. TXT lacks much formatting to create constructive aesthetics. HTML is what we have anyways, but that depends on what you use with it.
@Cinch Let's assume for a moment the reason you gave makes any sense whatsoever. So some people find it impossible to learn from books because some PDF readers are a bit slow?
@Cinch You cannot get over it without making an effort either. And come on, we're not talking about the loss of a loved one or rape; we're talking about some failed learning.
@R.MartinhoFernandes My impression is that he just wants to write online tutorials, that being the quickest/fastest/easiest way of being seen as a teacher, which for some reason gives him a boner or something. ICBW but this is what I've been observing for the last few months
@Cinch I certainly have and let me tell you that it is not sufficient to simply shove ice cream down their throats. You need to address the actual cause of the problem and not jjust work around it.
@Cinch I can't read your mind, it's just what I observe - just my impression. And I'm honestly sorry to sound mean, because I know you're a good guy. But this really needs to change IMO
IMHO we don't need to attract more people to programming, that'd create more badlets. Instead, we should improve the skills of the promising newbies, and don't let them become badlets.
They're essentially saying "All our developers are idiosyncratic lazy asses. We only get something done because we tell them to code in the most primitive and unupfuckable way possible, and we have a devils dozen for every project."
@Cinch His opinion is no more relevant than anybody else's, and furthermore, it's actually a bit less relevant since he'll openly admit that he doesn't really know C++.