Beefy Boxes and Bandwidth Generously Provided by pair Networks
Perl: the Markov chain saw
 
PerlMonks  

RE: User Requests Quest

by buzzcutbuddha (Chaplain)
on May 01, 2000 at 21:11 UTC ( [id://9822]=note: print w/replies, xml ) Need Help??


in reply to User Requests Quest

Vroom, didn't you just say in a Node about a week ago that you have exams
coming up soon? Well at least you will be busy for the summer.
I would be open
to working on a node, if you are open to extending this work to newbies.
I think it would be a great learning tool. Sort of a mentoring thing where I code
what I think is a good solution and then monks of higher stature look over it and correct
glaring errors and help me and others learn more. :)

Replies are listed 'Best First'.
RE: RE: User Requests Quest
by toadi (Chaplain) on May 01, 2000 at 21:42 UTC
    Hi,
    Letting a newbie maintain a website like this.
    That would be a joke. Coding and trying should be done on things
    where there's no prob when something gets wrong...

    No offence intended...

      I agree that letting newbies actually put their code into a 'prodution' environment would be disastrous.

      But I think it would be great for newbies to be able to view the source and make changes on their own systems. If they think they are on to something then they can submit a patch for a more advanced monk to approve and checkin to a source tree.

      I helped teach intro programming courses and I found that a newbie often had excellent ideas because his/her mental slate was clean. I think most of us get stuck in little programming paradigms that are hard to see out of. Sometimes a fresh look at problems (no matter what the skill level) can be extremely advantageous.
        May be I was a little hard.

        But I had some bad experience with newbies.
        There is a difference being a newbie and a very very newbie

        Making stupid mistakes is no problem with me, everybody makes them. But fuck-up a site and overwrite the original one with the bad one is *very* stupid.

        I agree letting newbies do hings, but do them local !!!! And think before you do things like this.


        Another example: At my former school the sys-admins are setting up firewalls and don't know what they're doing, they're testing with 250 users working on the network... Testing ok but not something that's needed to work, use tes-systems!!

        Sorry if I offended newbies.

        First: If the users coud help with the develpoement of this site, it woud be nice. I think we woud see many new and interesting features.

        Second: If a newbie wants to do something for this website, I think he or she shoud be encouraged. I think this shoud be a learning environment, and a place for the fun of Perl. I don't think we want people who want to contribute, or even ask newbie questions, to feel stupid or not welcome.

        Of course the code have to be moderated first.
        I hope vroom will get som time to code by himself and not just moderate our code :o)

        /wonko

        Just Another Perl Newbie

      The basic code is available from Everything Development Company. vroom's made a few customizations here and there (special nodetypes, mostly), but just about anyone with a Un*x box and MySQL can get a test site going.
      I've been thinking maybe it would be alright to have an area on the website (not front and center), where newbies could practice development, and show off their newly aquired skills.

Log In?
Username:
Password:

What's my password?
Create A New User
Domain Nodelet?
Node Status?
node history
Node Type: note [id://9822]
help
Chatterbox?
and the web crawler heard nothing...

How do I use this?Last hourOther CB clients
Other Users?
Others drinking their drinks and smoking their pipes about the Monastery: (8)
As of 2024-04-25 15:22 GMT
Sections?
Information?
Find Nodes?
Leftovers?
    Voting Booth?

    No recent polls found