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No! Not that!
You fool! The loops DECRIMENTING! Rename that variable!
Much more fun.
Panic, Chaos, Destruction.
My work here is done.
or "Drink. Get drunk. Fall over." - P O'H
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... with mixed results.
Some people just can't work if someone is sitting behind them and others enjoy working together with others. If you can pair two people from the latter category, the benefits are obvious: exchange of knowledge, more focus (less time spent on CodeProject ), no need for code reviews. Than again, most programmers fall into the former category, and forcing them to work with others will lead nowhere.
As Jim Morrison used to sing: People are Strange[^]
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Nemanja Trifunovic wrote: Some people just can't work if someone is sitting behind them
I can not type when someone is standing next to me. Well I have way more mistakes.
John
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John M. Drescher wrote: I can not type when someone is standing next to me. Well I have way more mistakes.
One of the brightest junior developers I ever hired was like that. I gave him a task and sat with him to help him find his way around in the code base, and he started making typos and became visibly nervous. Then I left him alone and told him to just ask if he needs any help from me, and everything went fine from that point on.
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I tried it a couple of times and it worked very well.
Normally I hate having someone looking over my shoulder.
Somehow discussing a problem together did not seem like looking over my shoulder.
Also, a bit of light banter whilst getting started goes long way.
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Sometimes we do some pair debugging if figuring out something is taking too long.
Two resources for the new piece of fresh code I see it as a waist, prefer putting that extra brain on a testing/deployment "team".
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Never really worked with debugging code either. Just too many different ways of doing things and of course my way is better and faster (for me).
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In the 80's, a physicist and I used to play Swords of Glass together: one to map, the other to move the characters.
This was extended through the Might and Magic series, at least through the World of Xene
I'm just not sure if this counts.
"The difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has its limits." - Albert Einstein | "As far as we know, our computer has never had an undetected error." - Weisert | "If you are searching for perfection in others, then you seek dissappointment. If you are searching for perfection in yourself, then you seek failure." - Balboos HaGadol Mar 2010 |
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. . . Don't Tell . .
"The difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has its limits." - Albert Einstein | "As far as we know, our computer has never had an undetected error." - Weisert | "If you are searching for perfection in others, then you seek dissappointment. If you are searching for perfection in yourself, then you seek failure." - Balboos HaGadol Mar 2010 |
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I remember pair programming with a good looking woman. That was over 20 years ago. But back then my programs were 500 lines max. Now I average 75000 line programs written entirely by me. Pairing up would only slow down the works..
John
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John M. Drescher wrote: I remember pair programming with a good looking woman.
Oh, yeah, there was that LISP class in college...
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I often used "Pair programming" in a very broad way when I was in school and we had to work has a team. The team was small and the project scale made configuration management irrevalent. Therefore, it was simpler to do pair programming and share our knowledge.
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I'm part of a team of a dozen people developing a product. A lot of our testing and debugging is done with several of us together at once. It's pretty effective for us.
As far as "pair programming[^]" goes under the formal definition, HELL NO!
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When implementing complex algorithm
Life's Like a mirror. Smile at it & it smiles back at you.- P Pilgrim
So Smile Please
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Which we do from time to time.
Pair coding is extremely rare.
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yeap, two mind is better then one mind
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I can never code if somebody stands on my head.
Those people who recognize that the imagination is reality’s master we call sages, and those who act upon it we call artists or lunatics. — Tom Robbins
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Some times, we do seat together in customer escalations where we have to give the pricise findings, also at the time of analysing complex logs and dumps.
Thanks,
Anand.
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I cannot code if someone is sitting next to me.
The funniest thing about this particular signature is that by the time you realise it doesn't say anything it's too late to stop reading it.
My latest tip/trick
Visit the Hindi forum here.
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When working on a big or complex project and then only when I work for someone else.
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Your project is in trouble if you have to resort to that kind of thing.
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