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00:15
Also do you guys think enums should be default specified to be unsigned char? Like what are the pros/cons of that?
 
9 hours later…
nwp
nwp
09:05
@sehe The original looks perfectly fine to me.
 
6 hours later…
15:09
@nwp the screenshot was at 100$ zoom though. It's legit illegible even if you have perfect eyesight
 
2 hours later…
17:28
@sehe In my case the wording should be "Stop trying to finish everything at the end of the day". For example, if I'm starting a refactoring, but it turns out to be bigger than I expected, then I shouldn't try to finish it by the end of the day. If I take my time (and I'm able to report my daily progress in a way that makes sense to the boss, lol), then I often end up doing an even bigger refactoring, without the time pressure, and with better results in the end.
17:55
100%
I have a co-mantra to this. "Write One To Throw Away" - first do it fast/sloppily. Then when you know what you want to end up (and what to avoid) do it again for real. The result is incomparably more organized in process, testability, documentation etc.
@sehe literally the first step in most agile books is to throw away the prototype
and yet that never happens
Yeah. But I consider all significant alterations a prototype. Unless the first pass already answers to all the usual quality criteria that I know come from the "One To Throw Away" approach. Which is... pretty rare.
So I generalize quite a bit from the prototype workflow, I think.
18:25
@Mgetz Fred Brooks said it back when "agile" only related to athletics and such.
@JerryCoffin AFAIK Fred Brooks invented agile and didn't call it that... he just called it good project management
@Mgetz Fair enough (though I suspect he'd disclaim having invented much of it--he was very open that most of what he advocated had already been invented).
Probably, but he wrote it down
and then everybody that needed to read his book didn't
@Mgetz Wrote it down, and organized what had previously been a bunch of separate little things into a coherent system.
@Mgetz That's for sure. I'm constantly amazed at how many supposed project managers haven't read it--and make the same mistakes he told us how to avoid decades ago.
well part of the problem is a lot of them are MBAs... and IME MBAs are an anti-pattern
18:32
@Mgetz Could be--but these weren't MBA types (and the one time I've worked with an MBA as a project manager, she was really good).
 
1 hour later…
19:55
Worked with zero MBAs
20:14
@Mikhail The one I worked with is pretty unusual (I think)--MBA from Stanford, but shortly after college worked on Bill Clinton's campaign, which I'm pretty sure helped her gain a lot more "real world" perspective on things really quickly.
<insert joke about sucking dick (see Monica Lewinsky)>
@Mikhail Yeah, I doubt that happened in this case.
Sorry for going for a cheap joke :-(
But ultimately, I don't quite understand the fear of MBAs as I've never seen them outside Accenture, and I noped the fuck out of that interview after the first conversation.
Actually, I think I've worked with somebody that had one of those 1 year MBA things
20:35
@Mikhail No biggie.
@Mikhail I think it mostly comes down to one thing: they're taught (with almost religious intensity) to focus on the current quarter and (possibly) the upcoming quarter, but almost nothing beyond. That tends to lead to a lot of short-sighted decisions.
There is some sense to that--a lot of companies have had great ideas and long term plans, but simply ran out of money and went out of business before they could achieve their goals. On the other hand, it's also led to a lot of decent companies being basically gutted for extremely short-term gain.
 
2 hours later…
22:26
@sehe that certainly made me go “??”

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