Okay, so I wasn't imagining things. I found the commit that deleted that webpage containing the object-oriented-programming article: https://github.com/dotnet/docs/commit/85c4ab0155aee537d228c8dd929793c828586f09
@misha130 The thing is, it wasn't just moved other wise there wouldn't be a problem. The original article was gutted, and the one you are redirected to is completely different because it is more like a tutorial where as the original article had more theory, with in-line examples.
@mr5 Yeah, but thanks for the effort. Will read that article now, and complete it.
@mr5 I have a question about MSDN articles like the one you just linked in the internet archive. How long should you take to complete such an article? It says 9 minutes to read, but I don't know if that time is only for text to speech programs?
@mr5 There are also links in the article that provide more info on types such as Events and Interfaces, should you be able to also read and understand these embedded links in 9 minutes?
@BlackPanther I'm really not sure how to answer this. Depends on the person. But for me, I do have a different technique when reading documentation. I skip the non essential parts and focus on the section I am most interested with and at the same time, implementing it in code.
@mr5 Interesting, so for that article. If you wanted to learn about object oriented programming. You wouldn't read any of the embedded links, you would only read the OOP article?
This is more efficient, but what about gaps in knowledge?
Sometimes the sections you are most interested in require knowledge from the non-essential parts
@BlackPanther I think the trick to learn fast is to do it dirty. Read a little, implement it and keep making more :)
Ask questions from time to time and let Google be your guide to get those answers.
Of course, you probably wouldn't learn all OOP concept in a single night unless you're super genius. It took me months/years (I'm not even sure actually) to do it properly (arguably)
@mr5 You read my mind, it is the trick to learning fast that I am after. I want to try to read and fully understand/comprehend that OOP article in 9 minutes, but maybe that's unrealistic.
So you would implement even the little code examples in the article?
What do you mean by
> and keep making more :)
?
@mr5 I was hoping it would take less than a single night. If the article is well written and self-contained, then that helps a lot
@mr5 Also because in C# you have to create a class with a Main program in order to implement any code example, I find implementing code examples slower than in JavaScript where you can run a single line in the console or in scratchpad (although scratchpad is now deprecated, sadly), rather than running a whole program which you have to do for C#.
I wish in C# you could run only a selected line or lines of code instead of having to run (i.e. execute) the whole class.