I hope you brought your asbestos underpants.The goal of all gifted computer nerds. "Real Programmers Dont Use PASCAL"
Can we now get back on topic or do we need to put this thread out of my misery?
I hope you brought your asbestos underpants.The goal of all gifted computer nerds. "Real Programmers Dont Use PASCAL"
I do and prefer itThe goal of all gifted computer nerds. "Real Programmers Dont Use PASCAL"
I'd forgotten how much time I wasted throwing penguins around...Just remembering some idiotic flash games that made me laugh, which would get people into reeducation camps now.
The quote was actually a reference to a classic from Datamation (July 1982) that well made the distinction between real programmers and "quiche eaters" as the author explained. One of the comments was that real programmers spend their time on tasks related to war ,like atomic bomb simulations and such.I hope you brought your asbestos underpants.
Can we now get back on topic or do we need to put this thread out of my misery?
This is folklore I'm familiar with:The quote was actually a reference to a classic from Datamation (July 1982) that well made the distinction between real programmers and "quiche eaters" as the author explained. One of the comments was that real programmers spend their time on tasks related to war ,like atomic bomb simulations and such.
Getting back to my original question, I've given some thought to how someone earlier said something like "sports are all the same, too". And I think I agree. They all have an ball of some sort that is thrown, carried or hit in order to gain more points to win a game. But when I watch them I get interested--even excited and compelled to watch--whereas, with computer games, I'm bored and don't see any differences.
And here, I think, is the reason why. Sports are a team sport. When you watch a game, you see most of the players and their strategy. You see how they all work together to reach their goal. You see how their opponent interacts with them and their opposing strategy. You know and see what's going on but every hit, throw and blow can be different due to human failings or successes. The exact same play can be entirely different one after the other. These human actions are lead to excitement and tension if you are also a fan of one team or the other.
With computer games, it's more personal and relevant to the person playing the game. But only he knows his strategy. Only he knows what came before and how he got there. If you walk in on his game, you don't know what happened before or how he got there. And a lot of the actions are based on how the computer reacts, not human error (mis-thrown ball to the wrong base). There seems to be limited possibilities versus what happens on a field of play.
(I had much more to say while driving in the car and I just got distracted while typing this and lost my rhythm. I might come back and add to this later.)
I know. My reply was a nodding reference to a c't editorial from around the same time, back then when they were a real computer magazine and not a press release printing service. The editorial picked that up and argued the other side, that readability leads to better algorithms, fewer bugs and a better project. It started by both actors putting on their armor and yelling things about honor.The quote was actually a reference to a classic from Datamation (July 1982) that well made the distinction between real programmers and "quiche eaters" as the author explained.
Getting back to my original question, I've given some thought to how someone earlier said something like "sports are all the same, too". And I think I agree. They all have an ball of some sort that is thrown, carried or hit in order to gain more points to win a game. But when I watch them I get interested--even excited and compelled to watch--whereas, with computer games, I'm bored and don't see any differences.
Thinking about this, it does make sense. In a ball sport, you have everything in a single field of vision