Steve, A big absolutely ....I am a big learner...taught myself just a ton of programming languages. Its a nack ....
Scott J Ford Software Engineer http://www.identityforge.com/ ________________________________ From: Steve Comstock <[email protected]> To: [email protected] Sent: Friday, April 12, 2013 9:53 AM Subject: Re: Baseless problem On 4/12/2013 7:43 AM, Scott Ford wrote: > I totally agree..Tom ....I think one has to be open to different techniques > and try them It's a constant balance thing. When you have a technique that works for you, then there's one less set of decisions you need to make, allowing you to focus on the current task. However, you could be missing an alternative technique that has major benefits, so you have to consider the alternatives. But you can't afford to become paralyzed by looking at an infinite number of options. That's one of the benefits of this list: you can learn from people who have walked down a path and decide if it's worth your while to explore that path based on what is reported here. > > Scott ford > http://www.identityforge.com/ > > Tell me and I'll forget; show me and I may remember; involve me and I'll > understand. - Chinese Proverb > > > On Apr 12, 2013, at 9:37 AM, Tom Marchant <[email protected]> wrote: > >> On Fri, 12 Apr 2013 09:27:37 -0400, Scott Ford wrote: >> >>> This is a matter of style to me and experience level. I learned the data >> areas and liberals at the tail end of your code >> >> Right. If you *want* to put your constants and literals at the end, that's >> your business. But when someone says that they *can't* put them at the >> beginning, that's when I suggest an option. >> >> -- >> Tom Marchant > -- Kind regards, -Steve Comstock The Trainer's Friend, Inc. 303-355-2752 http://www.trainersfriend.com * To get a good Return on your Investment, first make an investment! + Training your people is an excellent investment * Try our tool for calculating your Return On Investment for training dollars at http://www.trainersfriend.com/ROI/roi.html
