I would not go even if they paid me money
Waste of time .
I rather travel around the world ...
Quote:to serve your country
Not all people think that way . I'm one of those negative people lol
I "served my country" by mowing the lawn and guarding the lawnmowers at night. I'm serious, that's basically all I did. Thank God it only lasts 6 months in my country (and 4 weeks of that were training, which was kinda fun; also I lost some weight, which is always nice)
(03-23-2013, 12:13 AM)admin89 Wrote: [ -> ]Quote:"to serve your country"
Not all people think that way . I'm one of those negative people lol
Actually you forgot my
"...
". They were here for a good reason
Although there've been a couple of pages of words between when it was relevant and now, I'd like to point out that the reason why my post about some of my classmates disagreeing with NV read like it meant that some random 16-18 year-olds disagreed with NV, but there weren't any real reasons was because that was exactly what it was supposed to mean. The point of the post was to illustrate of unlikely NV is to have a major affect on how my class write their A-Level computing coursework.
Well too bad for them. I remember my classmates being pretty retarded at that age so I can't say that I'm really surprised by any of this. It gets a lot better once you go off to university though. And even better once you pass freshman/sophomore year since that's when you have to take general education classes and when the retards drop out.
I'm considering buying a tablet.
Is the Nexus 7 still okay or is there something better i should look into (Should cost the same though)
I was actually with a group of people who are the smart ones. Most of their opinions are well thought out.
A random quote from the internet, which is pretty much the only, although not insignificant, reason why notepad++ is more useful in this application:
Quote: Learning to code in a text editor makes for a better programmer, it makes one actually learn how the language works. Daily coding in a text editor is wasting someones money, hopefully not yours.
For the first few weeks/months maybe. But after that is becomes completely pointless. If you know how to setup a main function and do #include<stuff> statements you're already ready to move on to tools that the industry actually uses. Continuing to use tools that the industry deems grossly inferior is a waste of your time. You're going to have to start using some of these tools sooner or later if you actually want to do any serious programming or get a job in the industry.
AnyOldName3 Wrote:I was actually with a group of people who are the smart ones. Most of their opinions are well thought out.
Smart is a relative term. Smart compared to the rest them maybe. As for their opinions being well thought out. I must assume that this is untrue until I am proven wrong via them actually giving some of these well thought out reasons. It's perfectly logical for me to make this assumption seeing as how I have never met these people.
I would really prefer to move onto another topic of discussion if you don't mind.
Unfortunately I can't help Anti-Ultimate since I know nothing of the tablet market. I'm hoping someone else can help him *stares at admin89 who tends to know about these things*.
Quote: Learning to code in a text editor makes for a better programmer, it makes one actually learn how the language works. Daily coding in a text editor is wasting someones money, hopefully not yours.
I disagree. I just started Computer Sciences in College this year and I am being forced to use notepad++, and that's a pain. I miss Eclipse's notes about each class and its methods, I basically learned Java reading from them.
(03-23-2013, 02:03 PM)Runo Wrote: [ -> ]Quote: Learning to code in a text editor makes for a better programmer, it makes one actually learn how the language works. Daily coding in a text editor is wasting someones money, hopefully not yours.
I disagree. I just started Computer Sciences in College this year and I am being forced to use notepad++, and that's a pain. I miss Eclipse's notes about each class and its methods, I basically learned Java reading from them.
We used paper and wrote code on there before we moved onto Visual Studio (learning C# in austrian college).
However that was more like an introduction to programming languages so i guess mine doesn't count