Bringing students into a EECS program
Who the fuck seriously signs up for a computer science/engineering degree and hasn't at least spent a couple years programming in high school on their own? When I was in 6th grade I checked a timex synclair out of the library and made video games using BASIC.
If somebody goes into this program with no past programming experience they fucking deserve to be lost.
But unless I am programming graphics drivers nobody could give a fuck less. I work on web applications where performance is limited to a 50+ ms call to the database.
Well if you care so much for mouse feelings donate your body to science and let them experiment on you instead. Think of the mice! Be sure to donate all your granola stores to the starving children.
Ugg. You reminded me about another thing I hate about vb.net. The OO syntax is ghey beyond belief. 'static' makes sense to me, but 'shared'? I have forgottten the rest of the OO syntax but from what I remember it was just as clumsy. must override? WTF!
At least when I was using it a few years ago when I would write a function the compiler wouldn't pick up if I forgot to return a value. It is a common mistake for me and very frustrating when a function returns null and it 'should' be impossible. Yes, the syntax is very popular in a Britney Spears kind of way.
How the heck is it agile? Wordy syntax makes it agile? Having to call a function to cast objects makes it agile? No ternery operator? Errors constantly missed by the compiler?
Please enlighten me!
My main problem is that the vb.net is compiled into c# and then into runtime. Even with the most stringent compiling I find many programming mistakes are not picked up by the compiler. It makes problem solving a real chore, not to mention vb syntax is hideous.
Would it be unusual for a big company to file a complaint with the DOJ about this type of behavior? You are crediting Steve but I wonder if this is just business as usual for large companies.
No, somehow I have managed to survive 35 years without cold medicine, all of which are completely useless bullshit. Why supress symptoms that are actually your body cleaning the fucking germ crap out of itself? Your a stupid pussy.
Bringing students into a EECS program
Who the fuck seriously signs up for a computer science/engineering degree and hasn't at least spent a couple years programming in high school on their own? When I was in 6th grade I checked a timex synclair out of the library and made video games using BASIC.
If somebody goes into this program with no past programming experience they fucking deserve to be lost.
But unless I am programming graphics drivers nobody could give a fuck less. I work on web applications where performance is limited to a 50+ ms call to the database.
Either way, necrophilia is disgusting!
Well if you care so much for mouse feelings donate your body to science and let them experiment on you instead. Think of the mice!
Be sure to donate all your granola stores to the starving children.
Well if you care so much for mouse feelings donate your body to science and let them experiment on you instead. Think of the mice!
Ugg. You reminded me about another thing I hate about vb.net. The OO syntax is ghey beyond belief. 'static' makes sense to me, but 'shared'? I have forgottten the rest of the OO syntax but from what I remember it was just as clumsy.
must override? WTF!
His point was that most of the classic OO texts are in a c style language.
I don't know what I am doing wrong but this compiles with no warning....
Option Explicit On
Option Strict On
Module Module1
Sub Main()
Console.WriteLine(Test())
End Sub
Function Test() As String
End Function
End Module
At least when I was using it a few years ago when I would write a function the compiler wouldn't pick up if I forgot to return a value. It is a common mistake for me and very frustrating when a function returns null and it 'should' be impossible. Yes, the syntax is very popular in a Britney Spears kind of way.
How the heck is it agile? Wordy syntax makes it agile? Having to call a function to cast objects makes it agile? No ternery operator? Errors constantly missed by the compiler?
Please enlighten me!
My main problem is that the vb.net is compiled into c# and then into runtime. Even with the most stringent compiling I find many programming mistakes are not picked up by the compiler. It makes problem solving a real chore, not to mention vb syntax is hideous.
using your first /. ID is so Amateur
Be sure to teach your kids to let people on bs internet forums get under your skin, that is a real life lesson.
The horror should they outsource ZONKS job.
Are you new here? At least it's not a dupe.
It's called product cycles. Yeah, the Imac will never be as cool as when it first came out, and it never will. Should they stop selling it?
Is the Jobs reality distortion field hype, or does he realy change reality?
Would it be unusual for a big company to file a complaint with the DOJ about this type of behavior? You are crediting Steve but I wonder if this is just business as usual for large companies.
It's every man for himself, eh?
It does appear that historically every attempt to quash this instinct has failed.
There are other medications for that. What stinky vaginal hole did you get douched out of?
How I shed tears for you. Why supress symptoms that are actually your body cleaning the fucking germ crap out of itself? Your a stupid pussy.
No, somehow I have managed to survive 35 years without cold medicine, all of which are completely useless bullshit. Why supress symptoms that are actually your body cleaning the fucking germ crap out of itself? Your a stupid pussy.
Ok, you figured me out. I'll cut your tallywacker off if you are willing.
Sometimes I fit in some programming between posts.
I'm a HS dropout and make six figures doing this shit. I would feel really stupid if I went to college.