What do you do when you encounter a programming problem that is really hard for you to solve, and you have no idea yet? Usually, how do you solve it at last?
NOTES: Could someone introduce something about problem solving practice?
What do you do when you encounter a programming problem that is really hard for you to solve, and you have no idea yet? Usually, how do you solve it at last?
NOTES: Could someone introduce something about problem solving practice?
If I can, I leave it alone for a while. Often the solution will pop into my head when I least expect it. (If only we always had the luxury of waiting - often we don't.)
Edit: Another hugely useful thing to do is describe the problem to someone else. Even if they can't help, the very act of explaining it to someone who's unfamiliar with the problem will often clarify things in your mind. Sometimes you get straight to a solution that way, without the other person saying a word. 8-)
I just think it over when a pencil and paper.
For me the trick is breaking it into manageable bits.
-- Edit
I must agree with the poster above about talking to someone else, as well. Even if you don't have anyone you can talk to, explain it to a fluffy toy, and the answer will often become obvious.
Sometimes I'll search Stack Overflow to see if anyone has encountered the same or a similar problem; if they haven't, I'll sometimes post a question about it.
The book Peopleware put it in a nice way, that despite being a different context also works here.
The manager's function, they write, is not to make people work but to make it possible for people to work.
In this case you are your own manager, so its up to you to make it possible for yourself to work. If its something difficult you are struggling with, then you need to listen to yourself.. what is it you need in order to get started solving it.
For me, it can be that a major class in the project has the wrong name and is inelegant. In order to solve the problem in an elegant way these needs to be fixed first, otherwise it will end out as a half baked solution.
10 cents
For many problems, writing unit tests can help. Break it down (as silky suggests) and try writing tests for the various pieces. Then write code to make the tests pass. Check out some of the literature on TDD.
Writing throwaway "spike" code is also a handy way to figure out new things.
Well, it depends on the kind of problem, whether it's something you can research. For the things you can't, often specific design problems where I have problems keeping all the factors in mind at once, I've found two methods to work well: