I for one, absolutely hate it when my boss comes and sits next to me and rattles off a solution to something and expects me to just get it there and then. A) you've just told me this at 1000MPH and it barely had chance to stop for a piss-break on the way through my ears and B) WHAT THE FUCK?!?!
For example - today I needed to open explorer and select several files. I could spend the time learning how to do it myself, however, I wouldn't gain enough to spend the time doing it - a bit of C+V code is all I needed, and Google provided
I agree with that one in principle but sometimes you just don't have the time to understand why something works, as long as it works and doesn't do obvious nasty things to your data or whatever then I just run with it
What do they call that type of programmer again? Something like a sticky plaster programmer...?
@KendallFrey If I create a namespace namespace StuffICopiedFromKenall and stick a load of methods you wrote in there, I don't need to look at the code, even though I could... that's no different from me referencing StuffWhatKendallWrote.dll
There is a difference but at the base level, you're still just ignoring the code. That's probably OK if the library is well known, well tested and well documented but you're not going to learn by using libraries the whole time. And if you ever need to do something where you can't use said library you're screwed unless you understand how they did it.
The point I'm trying to make is you should be weary of all code you haven't written, be it compiled in a library or just copied and pasted from a gist; and you should be doubly weary of your own code.
Every piece of code you paste has been taken out of context. It still functions as though it was in the old context, and the new context may not be the same, thus causing errors.
A library's context is the context of the specific problem it was designed to solve. Just because it's not being used in the same program the authors may use it in doesn't mean the context is different. They still take the same arguments and return the same types.
@dav_i Maybe that guy was beyond help..... I'm sorry, but I've got an errors: error CS1914: Static field or property UDPReceive.CoordData.NIndex' cannot be assigned in an object initializer; error CS0122: UDPReceive.CoordData.NIndex' is inaccessible due to its protection level – user1764781 3 mins ago
Obviously that's more trustworthy than StuffWhatKendallWrote.dll but you can't say for sure that it won't break or produce unexpected results in every case
Assuming StuffWhatKendallWrote.dll is not being used by millions of developers
The point I'm trying to make is you should be weary of all code you haven't written, be it compiled in a library or just copied and pasted from a gist; and you should be doubly weary of your own code.
I have a problem from a Coding Challenge which I am unable to get the logic of how to proceed.
The problem statement is like some people were made to stand in a line side by side (not in a queue). The input is an array of integer which indicates the number of people taller than the person on the...
I suppose. I know I'd sure be peeved if I'd spent all day trying to figure out a problem and getting nowhere then just got flamed for asking for help. But in this case it would be cheating so that's ok
I remember helping someone that was worried about her classmates stealing the code. She posted a question and then said 'Don't answer the question here, send me the code by email.' o.O ?