HTWFAIP assumes everyone is driven by a sense of self importance you should nurture in order to well... win friends and influence people.
There is a very certain strategy I employ when I argue with people who are using the argument as a way to either be lazy, or gain strategic value in the project. I'm not proud of it but it's very effective.
I perform some of the most horrible logical fallacies to.
After I use a lot of confusing (though correct) terminology, and explaining all the research that went to basically saying I'm right. I go to on to describe all the cases the alternative approach fails. I never make it seem like I have a favorite.
It's never "We should do A"
It's "We could do A as MrFoo suggests or we could do B, personally I'm still thinking about it"
However, (assuming I want B) I display really unimportant advantages I know we don't really care about.
For example "If we ever switch our relational database to XML, and start using big XML files to store our data - A would be better, are there plans to do that?"
"If we ever want to put this code on embedded devices, A might be beneficial because..."
The implied notion here is that we'll be spending time being compatible with stuff we don't care about with A so it's not an advantage but a disadvantage.
I then proceed describing B, I go on to describe the advantages of B and they always speak about real business value. I describe successful projects that did B and how easy it was but I make it seem as if I'm not talking about our usage of B. It's never "We'll be done in 3 weeks if we do B", it's "TeamBar did B and they were done fast, although they now can't convert their databases to XML or publish to embedded devices, I think they're satisfied with the results".
I take every opportunity to punish MrFoo for not knowing unimportant detail, being snarky but not downright rude.
"Oh, so you don't know what the E programming language is? Don't worry about it, I didn't know about it when I started programming too - you should check it out it really opened my eyes"
I argue fast, I argue loud and I argue dirty when I have to.
I've been bitten once too many by not arguing when I should have, ever since I'm very keen on arguing at the design phase to not get shit in the fan in production.
"It's ok, I used to make that mistake when I learned OOP for the first time, it's very common"
When arguing against someone who isn't looking for constructive enhancement of knowledge, I go dirty.
Of course, I rarely resort to these tactics, most of our communication in TipRanks, and more generally at previous places I've worked at was good.
I gladly resort to them when the alternative is a mistake I know will cost us a lot in the future.
Group/Set theory trivia and intricate math details go a long way when arguing against completely irrelevant things in security - but if I have to quiz someone who has never done university level math at something irrelevant in order to prevent the team from rolling their own crypto - count me in.
Probably shouldn't, the 'correct' thing is to communicate better as a team and to define ownership. I feel that it's a problem most software shops have.
once everyone's all tuckered out and hates all the ideas that aren't theirs, speak up. "Well, there were a lot of different ideas here, and I think there's something good in each of them. As everyone's been discussing, I've been putting together something that takes the best from each"
@BenjaminGruenbaum This is not quite universal - works best when most are already the argumentative type.
I don't know, software engineers should not be that argumentative on everything, I do a lot of "I think we should do X but Y is sufficiently OK that it's not a huge deal". This is what lets me be more argumentative on the stuff I care about.
So I just heard from a coworker that he managed to git reset --hard every single commit for the past month and he pushed it hard up to remote. Pretend there doesn't exist a local repo that has the deleted commits. Does this mean he's getting fired?
Hello! I am doing stuff w/ fabricjs. I am stuck - I do an ajax call to load canvas data from the server. That works great, however I have a draw function and when I change the color (using spectrumjs) it deletes the canvas background color. I am just trying to store the background color as a global so I can insert it in the drawing function and maintain the background color when it is clicked. Any suggestions?
@ScottFloyd Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room pseudo-rules. Please don't ask if you can ask or if anyone's around; just ask your question, and if anyone's free and interested they'll help.