in reply to running with scissors - part 2
in thread "running with scissors"
What we want, merlyn, is a little more helpfulness and a little less ego. We all know you are the perl god. You do not need to go around giving font +4's, and terse, ridiculing responses to get us to respect you.
Here are some examples of terseness, name-calling and rudeness:
- RE: Get those parameters without CGI.pm ("I voted this code down...It doesn't solve anything in any way that...It does the dehex slower...Just remove it.")
- WARNING t0mas wrote BAD CODE("BAD CODE ABOVE")
- Yet Another Cargo Cult non-use of CGI.pm("Please stop with the cargo cult programming")
- If File Exists ("to keep you from making stupid dangerous mistakes like this")
- RE: RE: Slashdot Headline Grabber for *nix("Who compiles to ".exe" files? All that does is slow them down.")
- Re: website acces-stats("It's pointless. Please don't bother. See my rant on it on my homepage.")
- RE: Re: Sorting Arrays("Nope. You're using...")
You are a respected, admired member of the perl elite. You don't need to knock anyone down to secure your lofty place. You already have it.
Now, on a more positive note: you are capable of some truly enjoyable posts.
- Re: Not Inciting a Holy War
- RE: Re: CGI.PM related questions.
- RE: My favorite looping mechanism in Perl is:
Fundamentally, we want you to stop trying to build respect you already have, at the expense of other users. "Running with scissors" is frighteningly arrogant. Your proposed policy of making useless, pejorative posts just to "give (you) piece of mind," without the common decency to consider "details" and "nicey-nice"ness shocked me.
You said:
If there's something I'm not getting, you need to tell me.Please accept this as the "email or something" response. When you criticize someone's code, do you want them to stomp away and pout? Then don't stop "posting any more public messages." Someone voted you down; take it in the spirit intended (just as you would have someone accept any of your critique) and become an even better person because of it.
Russ
Brainbench 'Most Valuable Professional' for Perl
P.S. See
for similar comments.