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Dalek Dave wrote: He is younger than me!
So don't throw a pick in your arm and you should last longer than he did...
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Dalek Dave wrote: He is younger than me!
And now he'll never catch up.
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I want to ask everyone on codeproject is Indian Forum the only place to ask questions for Indians on ASP.Net.Why I am asking this please refer to the solution posted by Mr. OriginalGriff to my query here is the link
http://www.codeproject.com/Questions/719809/ASP-Net-Best-Practices
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1. Don't call him Mr. - he may pick you to the bones...
2. No, however in your case it was a thinkable solution - I'm sure you noticed that he offered this as an option. Also you have all the right to NOT accept, even down-vote. Believe or not OG is a harmless person if gets his raw-met-of-lambs in time...
3. Bonus - Useful Reference Books[^]
I'm not questioning your powers of observation; I'm merely remarking upon the paradox of asking a masked man who he is. (V)
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1) Oh I thought "Mr." is a decent way of addressing someone and by the way I have not offended anyone that someone will pick me to bones.
2)"In my case" I was just asking for asp.net best practices book based on readers experiences as googling gave me so many results.But how does it matter if I belong to India or some other country? I never mentioned I have problem reading books written in English language.
3)Thankyou for the bonus links.
modified 2-Feb-14 15:09pm.
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Interesting, someone asked something similar earlier today and this was my response to him.
If you are not a native speaker, and you don't possess at least quasi-western social attitude, Code Project is not the best place for you. That is how it is, it's a site run out of Canada catering towards American and Canadian developers primarily (and to a lesser degree European and Australian devs too).
The General Indian Topics forum exists not because it's a place for Indian devs to socialize but so that Indian devs who don't fit the above characteristics can stay off the Lounge and the Soapbox.
I am not trying to scare you away, just trying to be honest about how it is. There are plenty of Indian developer sites run by Indians - so you should be able to easily find alternatives.
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Is this something written by your own? You mean to say being an Indian I have no right to ask a quesion other than in Indian Forum?You mean to say Indians dont have the knowledge to ask question openly. They should only interact in Indian forums? And sharing knowledge depends upon which country I belong to? Your response was not good enough.
modified 2-Feb-14 17:37pm.
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That is not what Nishant wrote. You may notice that Nish is Indian himself. What he was pointing out is that oftentimes Indian contributors get a tougher ride because western attitudes jar with them. If you ask a good question, and show that you have tried then that is all that matters.
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I noticed that his response was not good enough.
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Whose response? Please try to be more specific.
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In what way was it not good enough?
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Thanks Pete. Apparently my original response was not clear enough, based on some of the replies I got.
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It seemed perfectly clear to me. Perhaps I just get you.
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DotnetCoders001 wrote: You mean to say being an Indian I have no write to ask a quesion other than in Indian Forum
It's pretty difficult to read Nish's reply like that IMO. I read it as something like: the majority of users here are north Americans and a few Europeans, and that they/we don't accommodate people outside this group well, so Indians who have problems might be better off elsewhere. If anything I'd say it was a mild rebuke to the community, rather than advice naff off elsewhere. Of course, only Nish can explain what he meant obviously, but that is how I read it.
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Nobody owes you an answer, you can always try to ask and see if someone will answer.
modified 20-Oct-19 21:02pm.
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DotnetCoders001 wrote: Is this something written by your own? You mean to say being an Indian I have no right to ask a quesion other than in Indian Forum?You mean to say Indians dont have the knowledge to ask question openly. They should only interact in Indian forums? And sharing knowledge depends upon which country I belong to? Your response was not good enough.
I re-read what I wrote and I do not understand how you came to these conclusions. I did not imply any of those things you seem to think that I did.
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Namaste, Nish-ji,
I always thought the title "General Indian Topics" was a secret code for "Cricket Forum," used because the Walt Disney Company threatened to sue CodeProject for trademark infringement on the "Jiminy Cricket" brand.
But, I have never been able to explain why QA Forums do not have titles like "Homework C#", "Homework C# 4.0," or, even titles like, "Exam Panic C#," etc. What did "homework" infringe on ?
Am I all wrong just to judge forums by their content ?
“But I don't want to go among mad people,” Alice remarked.
“Oh, you can't help that,” said the Cat: “we're all mad here. I'm mad. You're mad.”
“How do you know I'm mad?” said Alice.
“You must be," said the Cat, or you wouldn't have come here.” Lewis Carroll
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BillWoodruff wrote: I always thought the title "General Indian Topics" was a secret code for "Cricket Forum,"
Well cricket and Indian politics seem to be the most popular topics there, that's for sure.
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Nish Sivakumar wrote: catering towards American and Canadian developers primarily (and to a lesser degree European and Australian devs too).
Wow, Nish - really?
I've spent over a decade trying to ensure our community is inclusive, understanding, and holds on to the notion that English is not everyone's first language. CodeProject welcomes all cultures, and through our incredibly diverse membership I've learned more about other cultures than I ever thought possible. Yet you essentially tell this guy that if he isn't North American he should go to a different site.
That's incredibly depressing to read that from you.
Nish Sivakumar wrote: The General Indian Topics forum exists not because it's a place for Indian devs to socialize but so that Indian devs who don't fit the above characteristics can stay off the Lounge and the Soapbox
Actually no. GIT was created so that
a) Our extremely large Indian population would have a place to be themselves, to converse in their own language and to post their (sometimes unique) humour.
b) Indian newcomers to CodeProject would have a place to acclimatise and to get a feel for what works and what doesn't work in a forum that's extremely multicultural.
GIT was created because we have a large Indian membership. We wanted to encourage that membership, and wanted a place to allow our Indian members to get their feet wet if they aren't yet comfortable with Lounge. It's most certainly not a place to corral anyone so they can "stay off the Lounge and the Soapbox"
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Chris Maunder wrote: I've spent over a decade trying to ensure our community is inclusive, understanding, and holds on to the notion that English is not everyone's first language. CodeProject welcomes all cultures, and through our incredibly diverse membership I've learned more about other cultures than I ever thought possible. Yet you essentially tell this guy that if he isn't North American he should go to a different site.
Hey Chris, there is no question that you intended the community to be international and multi-cultural. But it is a fact that there is a dichotomy between what you envisioned and the behavior of this site's community. Perhaps my response to the OP was not clear enough, but I was referring to the community here rather than to site management.
As for the GIT forum, I have been an active participant there since its inception, and have often been involved with relatively new Indian members who've struggled to fit into the Lounge or the other main forums here. But it's been counter-productive when people redirect spammers and trolls of Indian origin to the GIT forum, and treat it as a sort of purgatory of sorts for posts they don't want to see.
When someone like Griff (probably the most visible answerer here) tells someone to buy an Indian-language textbook, that is merely an indication of the general thinking here. It's similar to telling someone with a Jewish name to buy a Hebrew translation of Thinking in C++. The GIT forum has active members helping people out, but it's not meant to be a grammar/language training forum. So, if someone struggles to put a simple question into a comprehensible format, I don't see how he or she would benefit from posting here, except to add weight to the stereotype about Indian programmers posting low-value content here. (the phrase "homework question" is near-synonymous with Indian-programmer-question here)
And again, given how the community is run in a mostly democratic fashion, your goals and values will not always resonate with that of your most active members'. I don't see that as a failing of any sort, and in fact I think it's one of the site's biggest strengths compared to a place like S.O. where the admins and moderators are more dictatorial in general.
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"Indian programmers posting low-value content here"
"Indian members who've struggled to fit into the Lounge or the other main forums here"
Nish,
I do not suffer an English problem nor do I think my content was weak.You have no right to typecast Indian Programmers as the one posting low value content or as the one who are not able to frame their questions properly. There is no one perfect on this planet and that inlcudes you too.
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DotnetCoders001 wrote: I do not suffer an English problem nor do I think my content was weak.You have no right to typecast Indian Programmers as the one posting low value content or as the one who are not able to frame their questions properly. There is no one perfect on this planet and that inlcudes you too
My response to Chris was general in nature and I was not specifically referring to you. The stereotypes I referred to above are not my creations, they already exist - and I was not condoning them either.
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