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Re: The benefits of pathological behaviour

by john1987 (Acolyte)
on Feb 01, 2001 at 06:54 UTC ( [id://55634]=note: print w/replies, xml ) Need Help??


in reply to The benefits of pathological behaviour

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Re: Re: The benefits of pathological behaviour
by azatoth (Curate) on Feb 01, 2001 at 15:37 UTC
    Hi there.

    I admit I voted your node down, John, because I don't really see how it pertains to Perl itself.

    A lot of your writings seem based mainly on conjectures to me, and I really don't agree with the "zealot" type advocacy of All Things Perl. The way I see it, Perl is a tool to be learned and then implemented as seen fit, but I really don't think anyone should be "evangelizing" something that at the end of the day is a Programming Language, albeit a very handy one.

    I think you'll do a lot better in this community John if you tone it down a bit. I have looked through most of your posts, and I have a feeling people downvote you because of this fanatacism towards Perl. My advice (if you want to accept advice from a Scribe that is) would be to concentrate on the application of your beloved language in everyday scenarios, as opposed to waxing lyrical about its beauty to you.

    Feel free to vote me down on this one folks, but i'm tired of seeing posts downvoted and not seeing any explanations.

    Thanks and Best Regards,

    Azatoth a.k.a Captain Whiplash

    Get YOUR PerlMonks Stagename here!
(jeffa) Re: Re: The benefits of pathological behaviour
by jeffa (Bishop) on Feb 01, 2001 at 09:21 UTC
    Um, no - you totally missed the context of the word
    'stress.' extremely was not talking about limits of
    a person's mental edurance, he was referring to
    pushing the limits of Perl itself.

    To give you an example of 'stress' in this context,
    I will tell the story of the 'calculator stress test.'
    In high school, my friend would take his calculator
    and place it under one the feet of his chair. He would
    then carefully shift his weight until a snap sound
    was produced from the calculator. He would then see
    what the effect was on his calculator. He would then
    get his mom to by him a new calculator. My friend was
    being a moron - but this should give you a clear example
    of this particular use of the word 'stress.'

    Now, as for your attitude towards dealing with personal
    stress that arrises when your program don't work: take
    a break, walk away, save and come back later. I've
    gotten 'stressed out' many times, and anger only gets in
    the way of progress during those situations. Go outside.
    Get some exercise. Ride a bike.

    Jeff

    L-LL-L--L-LL-L--L-LL-L--
    -R--R-RR-R--R-RR-R--R-RR
    F--F--F--F--F--F--F--F--
    (the triplet paradiddle)
    

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