"One reason not to get a tattoo is that a tattoo is positive identification. No one should ever do anything to help the police, especially when you may be the object of their interest." - George Carlin
“Instead of building newer and larger weapons of mass destruction, I think mankind should try to get more use out of the ones we have.”
Deep Thoughts by Jack Handey
The advantages I see are 1. Fewer keystrokes: An obvious benefit, but perhaps better than one might think if, like me, you mis-key what you're intending to type, every 10th curly brace or so and have to spend a few extra moments wrestling with repositioning things and 2. Fitting more code on the screen feels like it gives me a small, but not insignificant, mental boost, by increasing the likelihood that I can see related bits of code without having to scroll to find them.
I worked as a professional C# developer (with curly braces) for about 7 years before starting to code all personal projects in F#, and have used Python in numerous continuing education courses, and I immediately preferred significant white-spacing, but it's probably just a personal preference. I've never even thought of the potential for increased software defects, so I don't think that would be a likely issue for me. I'm certain that the type system in F# all but eliminates the chance that you'd get a code block out of place and still have your software compile. Perhaps that would be a more likely problem with Python, but still not one that I've encountered. I try to adhere to the "Make your methods (or, functions) small, then make them smaller than that" school of clean code which might be a part of the reason why I've not run into indentation problems. I've also not tried integrating with a team which has used different code editors with potentially different whitespacing configurations, but that doesn't sound difficult to overcome.
The biggest problem I've probably ever had that is at all closely related to this conversation was maintaining old Delphi/Pascal code, which as I recall did not have significant whitespace ('begin" and "end" I believe, blech), but also the coding environment lacked a feature to automatically fix code indentation, and some of the monster methods in the legacy code that I was maintaining was nigh unreadable due to horribly mis-aligned indentation.
I would never advocate for adding significant whitespacing to an existing language.
We're not going to mandate government tracking beacons in every vehicle. We're just going to record the time and location of your vehicle so frequently you might as well have a government tracking beacon attached to your vehicle.
Perhaps this will cut down on vehicle theft, but then, installing a telescreen (or, a live government agent for that matter) in every home might cut down on domestic violence. Installing a government mind control chip in your brain, should they exist some day, will likely reduce the crime rate as well.
Although I have become convinced that the income gap in this country has probably grown too large, these " top 7% of households earn more than the bottom 67%"-type comparisons really fundamentally bother me.
I never, ever want to live in a country where the top X% earn exactly X% of the income.
I think it's relevant enough: http://theoatmeal.com/pl/state...... and if I can't google or otherwise circumvent my way to the content, I'm perfectly fine to go without it.
"Gallup has found that only 10 percent of working people possess the talent to be a great manager,"
That about coincides with the percentage of great managers that I've worked with.
Or could I include an enemy or two as well? Can the "friends" include VMs of which I just took a rollback snapshot a few moments ago?
"One reason not to get a tattoo is that a tattoo is positive identification. No one should ever do anything to help the police, especially when you may be the object of their interest." - George Carlin
Yes. If life sucks for you, it should suck for everyone else! Drag everyone down to the level of the person who has it the worst.
The FAA already got their $5 out of me.
Reminds me of this XKCD https://xkcd.com/870/
Woo hoo! XAML.
... and then invent AI that immediately learns how to spread out faster than we figured out for ourselves.
I can see why we need to treat drones/quadcopters the same way. Something needs to be done to stop the mass carnage that they are causing.
Posting the originating Stack Overflow link is like saying to your coworker, "Go argue with these 350 other people who upvoted this."
“Instead of building newer and larger weapons of mass destruction, I think mankind should try to get more use out of the ones we have.” Deep Thoughts by Jack Handey
some DRM and remote monitoring/disabling capability. Some firmware that can't be easily reverse-engineered or otherwise examined.
The irony of Slashdot not preserving the whitespace between my paragraphs here is not lost on me.
The advantages I see are 1. Fewer keystrokes: An obvious benefit, but perhaps better than one might think if, like me, you mis-key what you're intending to type, every 10th curly brace or so and have to spend a few extra moments wrestling with repositioning things and 2. Fitting more code on the screen feels like it gives me a small, but not insignificant, mental boost, by increasing the likelihood that I can see related bits of code without having to scroll to find them. I worked as a professional C# developer (with curly braces) for about 7 years before starting to code all personal projects in F#, and have used Python in numerous continuing education courses, and I immediately preferred significant white-spacing, but it's probably just a personal preference. I've never even thought of the potential for increased software defects, so I don't think that would be a likely issue for me. I'm certain that the type system in F# all but eliminates the chance that you'd get a code block out of place and still have your software compile. Perhaps that would be a more likely problem with Python, but still not one that I've encountered. I try to adhere to the "Make your methods (or, functions) small, then make them smaller than that" school of clean code which might be a part of the reason why I've not run into indentation problems. I've also not tried integrating with a team which has used different code editors with potentially different whitespacing configurations, but that doesn't sound difficult to overcome. The biggest problem I've probably ever had that is at all closely related to this conversation was maintaining old Delphi/Pascal code, which as I recall did not have significant whitespace ('begin" and "end" I believe, blech), but also the coding environment lacked a feature to automatically fix code indentation, and some of the monster methods in the legacy code that I was maintaining was nigh unreadable due to horribly mis-aligned indentation. I would never advocate for adding significant whitespacing to an existing language.
... to just shut down that whole thing."
http://img.ifcdn.com/images/c9...
Do you promise that none of those other programs/purposes will creep back in addition to the guaranteed income?
>> It seems like a violation of something fundamental to me.
Things like liberty? Pursuit of happiness? Common sense?
... when the prosecutor handed OJ the glove to try on?
"Wrong" is probably not a legal term, but it's adequate for me to base my voting decision on.
We're not going to mandate government tracking beacons in every vehicle. We're just going to record the time and location of your vehicle so frequently you might as well have a government tracking beacon attached to your vehicle. Perhaps this will cut down on vehicle theft, but then, installing a telescreen (or, a live government agent for that matter) in every home might cut down on domestic violence. Installing a government mind control chip in your brain, should they exist some day, will likely reduce the crime rate as well.
I'd say that employers must be solely concerned with people talking to each other all of the time, and not concerned one bit about productivity!
... Let's all just go read all of the data for anyone we know, right now. Then there will be no potential for blackmail.
Although I have become convinced that the income gap in this country has probably grown too large, these " top 7% of households earn more than the bottom 67%"-type comparisons really fundamentally bother me. I never, ever want to live in a country where the top X% earn exactly X% of the income.
I think it's relevant enough: http://theoatmeal.com/pl/state... ... and if I can't google or otherwise circumvent my way to the content, I'm perfectly fine to go without it.
"Gallup has found that only 10 percent of working people possess the talent to be a great manager," That about coincides with the percentage of great managers that I've worked with.