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We ended up at the sea bottom (name of the restaurant: "De Zeebodem")
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RickZeeland wrote: which will probably raise eyebrows with English CodeProject members. With the dutch as well.
Can you not afford real meat?
Bastard Programmer from Hell
"If you just follow the bacon Eddy, wherever it leads you, then you won't have to think about politics." -- Some Bell.
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Well, they also had a "High meat" for the same (very reasonable) price, but as the dish was for 2 persons we had to choose. Next time we will go for the meat I think
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High meat.
I'm thinking a pig that's stoned like a garnaal.
Bastard Programmer from Hell
"If you just follow the bacon Eddy, wherever it leads you, then you won't have to think about politics." -- Some Bell.
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RickZeeland wrote: accompanied by chips
So long as it was proper chips[^] and not fries, or what Americans call "chips" that are actually crisps, then you're fine.
(Damnit, now you're making me hungry! )
"These people looked deep within my soul and assigned me a number based on the order in which I joined."
- Homer
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Actually it was a kind of chips I had not seen before, looked a bit like potato slices that were folded and then fried.
Maybe they had had an accident in the kitchen
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(I've probably rant about this before, I have some time to learn new things)
Not the act of learning new technologies, that's always fun.
But I hate trying to find good and up to date (modern) documentation and tutorials, or tutorials that go from uber simple things to WTF did you just show ... there are missing steps that should probably be obvious, but no.
I also hate installing tools (yes, I'm talking to you SQL Server Express), that does not install.
Or downloading code that does not compile or use deprecated or obsolete frameworks
Also, I have no clue what the new technologies are, what is "cool" or what is in need right now; I know it depends on what I want to do and what the company wants me to do.
I'm many years in technical debts and I have a lot of catch up to do;
Thank you for attending my anti-TED talk.
CI/CD = Continuous Impediment/Continuous Despair
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I totally agree.
The thing I find most annoying is that when you go looking for example code and you already have a basic understanding you find the SAME simple example code everywhere. No one seems to want to tackle a little bit more advanced subject.
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There's a thin line between love and hate (famous Dutch saying)
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I have been running as hard as I can to "Keep Up", since GW-Basic was Microsoft's only product. I have grown very tired of all aspects of it as well.
really old guy
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Maximilien wrote: But I hate trying to find good and up to date (modern) documentation and tutorials, or tutorials that go from uber simple things to WTF did you just show ... there are missing steps that should probably be obvious, but no.
Yes, indeed! Quality of documentation went down the drain some time ago and it doesn't seem to have any uptrend. Maybe the CEOs fired all the technical writers in anticipation of ChatGPT doing the work for free. Open-source projects never had any technical writers and real programmers never write documentation. Blah!
Mircea
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Even worse, there is a teacher over here at a local college who teaches that it is nonsense to write documentation as it will soon be expired!
Sadly we get new developers from that school who think that this is ok ...
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Centuries of evolution are turning on their head. Imagine where we would have been if Newton would not have written Principia thinking Einstein will make it obsolete. Our whole civilization relied on writing down stuff that becomes obsolete. Now even writing as a whole take a step backwards: one of the most profound human inventions, the alphabetic writing (as opposed to hieroglyphic writing) is reversed by the use of emojis. Why write when we can draw a face? Back to the cave wall!
I sound like an old curmudgeon... wait, maybe that's what I am.
Mircea
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Mircea Neacsu wrote: I sound like an old curmudgeon... wait, maybe that's what I am. I am not as old as you (I think), but I totally agree with you.
M.D.V.
If something has a solution... Why do we have to worry about?. If it has no solution... For what reason do we have to worry about?
Help me to understand what I'm saying, and I'll explain it better to you
Rating helpful answers is nice, but saying thanks can be even nicer.
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I totally agree. The written word is a powerful tool.
Pics are fine, but there are not worth the thousand words they used to be.
Emoji's are just a form of shorthand. Rubber stamps.
"A little time, a little trouble, your better day"
Badfinger
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There's a bit of a furore here about the publisher "re-wording" much/most of Roald Dahl's childrens' books, to remove "offensive or discriminatory" language. On a morning TV news discussion today, a supporter of the move said "But the essence of the story remains the same". Sadly, "the essence" is not what makes a great book. The "essence" of Willy Wonka's chocolate factory is that boy from deprived background wins ticket to chocolate factory, has a great time. "He was an enormously fat boy" is not equivalent in meaning to "He was enormous".
These "essences" do not do justice to their originals. "Essence" is not what makes great writing. If the words and attitudes expressed cause offence, then take that as learning about the past; if you don't like it, don't read it.
One of the participants this morning was complaining about the James Bond novels, which I think most of us would agree include some rather racist and sexist views and language. She was up in arms about it, how it would affect younger readers and present these as acceptable attitudes. Then she shot herself in the foot by saying her teenage daughters read one of the books, and were falling about in hysterical laughter at the attitudes presented. They knew it described views that no-one can take seriously these days, and certainly didn't feel "objectified" by the words.
[Sorry, gone a bit off-topic here, but it did annoy me. Apparently the Roald Dahl publishers have now agreed to continue publishing the original version, along with an edited "PC" edition.]
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The "essence" is the action. What happens, what this and that person (or whatever) is doing. Any "idea", any thought (beyond the level of "good vs. evil", which is anyway reflected in the actions) is inessential.
(An aside: Was your post really meant as a follow up to Mircea Neacsu's post? I do not see the connection. Did you intend it for another thread?)
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Yes, I was going a little off-topic, but reacting to "Now even writing as a whole take a step backwards". There's a difference between being "politically correct" and dumbing down writing to the point that whilst it may still describe the action (as you put it) it does so blandly and without personality. It's depressing when even publishers don't seem to "get" that deleting words from a text also deletes not only a lot of meaning but a lot of the pleasure too.
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Mircea Neacsu wrote: Quality of documentation went down the drain some time ago
Could you put a date on that?
I know in the 90s that I only ever found one library that had good documentation.
In the 80's I learned C++ using exactly 3 books. One was the Stroustrup which was a specification. Other was not even C++ but rather Object C (or whatever it was called). Third was by a woman (very rare then) and it seemed rather effective.
In the 70's the only thing that existed for Fortran and Pascal were the functional reference manuals. And really expensive. I think I got one of those by pulling an old version out of the trash.
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jschell wrote: Could you put a date on that? I would go for mid to late '90-es.
jschell wrote: One was the Stroustrup which was a specification. I've used the ARM (Annotated Reference Manual) by Stroustoup and Ellis. Btw, if the woman you are talking about is Margret Ellis, she is very effective author.
The number of manuals was smaller but their quality was much better (me thinks). That depends also on the style of documentation you like. Me, I'm a fan of dry, terse and complete manuals.
Mircea
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Mircea Neacsu wrote: I would go for mid to late '90-es....I've used the ARM (Annotated Reference Manual) by Stroustoup and Elli
However the 90s was when libraries for C/C++ started to become available. But Stroustrup was documenting the language and nothing else. And the Ellis book (80s) did the same but more on using it rather than what it was.
So as I already mentioned in the 90s of the many libraries I used I found only one that had good documentation. There were more good books published in the 90s (Meyers and Ellis) but those were still on using C++. So they expanded what what already there but the additional stuff was not documented.
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You can start to re-learn JavaScript asap, that should calm you down !!!
Caveat Emptor.
"Progress doesn't come from early risers – progress is made by lazy men looking for easier ways to do things." Lazarus Long
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That's next on the line.
This and typescript; I've done a little bit of it 2 years ago, but I forgot all about it.
CI/CD = Continuous Impediment/Continuous Despair
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Maximilien wrote: a little bit of it 2 years ago, but I forgot all about it. That's normal, the brain just flushes away the crap... as you in the toilette
Disclaimer: I am not saying Typescript is sh1t, but it was an easy joke
M.D.V.
If something has a solution... Why do we have to worry about?. If it has no solution... For what reason do we have to worry about?
Help me to understand what I'm saying, and I'll explain it better to you
Rating helpful answers is nice, but saying thanks can be even nicer.
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I find learning new languages extremely boring because it's just variations on a theme. (No amount of coffee) On the other hand, researching a new problem domain can send me happily in all kinds of directions for months even if it isn't any easier.
"Before entering on an understanding, I have meditated for a long time, and have foreseen what might happen. It is not genius which reveals to me suddenly, secretly, what I have to say or to do in a circumstance unexpected by other people; it is reflection, it is meditation." - Napoleon I
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