Following this question, what real life good habits has programming given you?
|
|
No more "almost" in my life and no more troubles with my girlfriend is just try catch ñ_ñ |
|||
|
|
|
|
|
|||
|
|
|
|
For me the opposite of this is true. Programming has brought very few good habits to my everyday life. But my every day life is constantly bringing good (and sometimes bad) habits to my programming. For example, I used to be the worst programmer in the world when it came to comments. I found it was largely because I tend to be a very unorganized person, but as soon as I forced myself to be more organized in my every day life (taking better care of the bills, keeping the house, especially my desk, clean) the benefits to my code were noticeable immediately. |
|||
|
|
|
|
I'm not sure it affects my daily life in this way, but it gives me a vocabulary. I look at the way my boss uses his computer. He seems to be an event consumer. He watches the screen until it enters a state where it is waiting for him to respond, then he provides the requested data. His work gets done deterministically in the order it is started (He uses a priority queue.) He's got one big mutex, and if its locked, well, you can try again later. I am an event producer. I fill the computers buffers with requests to process as quickly as i think of them. If one consumer becomes full, I'll asynchronously continue to add requests to other consumers. Work gets completed, but not in any particular order. My interrupt handling routines are a bit buggy, so sometimes, when work gets added, the current process segfaults. This gives rise to one of our most frequent conversations "How are you working with so many programs open?" (him) and "How do you get anything done with just one program open?" (me) |
|||
|
|
|
|
Using the correct terminology when talking about a technical field, or at least to someone who's specialized in a certain area. eg. it's not a "suspension shock absorber thing", it's a "beam axle". |
|||
|
|
