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| From | clvrmnky <spamtrap@clevermonkey.org> |
|---|---|
| Subject | Re: The Lisp Curse |
| Newsgroups | comp.lang.forth |
| References | <4e490dce$0$27156$a8266bb1@newsreader.readnews.com> <7b6a303d2e382688f064b2120a9dfc1c@dizum.com> <3b5a75d8-9b0c-4a45-a2b3-0f34d10a62ec@glegroupsg2000goo.googlegroups.com> <2efd03fc-13e5-4b48-a901-0bcbdab4c0cc@a27g2000yqc.googlegroups.com> <ec25a5cc-ef12-4996-9ca5-d895ad9e7cdd@m18g2000vbl.googlegroups.com> |
| Message-ID | <pan.2011.10.23.02.08.39@clevermonkey.org> (permalink) |
| Date | 2011-10-23 02:08 +0000 |
On Thu, 18 Aug 2011 23:45:45 -0700, John Passaniti wrote: > > The point is, of course, that coding is only one part of programming, > and it's not the most important part. Being able to think like a > programmer is far more important. Because when you have that skill,then > you can usually translate that skill to whatever language you happen to > be using. And that is what makes you valuable, not that you know > syntax. Obviously at some point, the goal is that you can write > efficient, elegant, and correct code. But that is just mechanical > mapping of the concepts in your head down to the language you're using. Indeed. I like to say that one of my best skills is simply reading source code. I've noted over the years that some people are simply better at reviewing a code-base (with all the weirdo stuff that a code-base collects over time) and grokking what the code does and what it is intended to do (as these are not always the same. But it is a key skill for the sort of work I do, and not something that was obvious to me when I first started, and certainly not something anyone ever suggested to me was important for a job in my field. But, in a way, each of us is slightly tuned for the particular shop we work in. -- c
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Re: The Lisp Curse clvrmnky <spamtrap@clevermonkey.org> - 2011-10-23 02:08 +0000
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