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I'm not stressing, but apparently I should be... Am I not working hard enough? Is something wrong with me? AAARGHHHH!!!
It's an OO world.
public class SanderRossel : Lazy<Person>
{
public void DoWork()
{
throw new NotSupportedException();
}
}
My blog[ ^]
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Ah, that's better. Balance has been restored!
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
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OriginalGriff wrote: Balance has been restored!
To the Republic or to the Empire?
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That's a really difficult one: The Empire had all the lovely toys, but couldn't shoot straight to save their own lives. But the republic had a wimpy idiot as the hero...
Should have made R2D2 the hero and killed off Luke in the second scene when thw escape pod landed on his head!
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
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One more gin and you will not feel any more pain either.
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With less than 5 months to go to retirement, it's hard to be stressed, except about the fact I have to show up at all!
As long as I'm getting paid I think I can handle that!
There's no drive to start any new major project, just keep things ticking and make sure I'm prepared to do a nice clean handover. Much of my time is spent documenting the crap out of everything. boring, maybe, but stressful - not so much!
Life is like a s**t sandwich; the more bread you have, the less s**t you eat.
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Actually one of my most stressfull periods at work was when there wasn't any (work that is)!
I wasn't afraid of losing my job and I wasn't afraid we'd go out of business, but just that feeling of not adding value and being bored was killing me. That's when I decided to go look for another job.
Of course I'm still young and at the beginning of my career, so I don't like to be standing still right now.
It's an OO world.
public class SanderRossel : Lazy<Person>
{
public void DoWork()
{
throw new NotSupportedException();
}
}
My blog[ ^]
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I can't say I enjoy being bored. Like you, I love to be engaged. But I've learned to deal with it. I'm more active on CP and I jump at the chance a new problem.
I've worked here 12 years (OMG) and I'll be leaving a huge legacy of code and solutions. This "business" is very complex and while a solid programmer will "get the code", the reasons "why" will make a weak person run for the hills. I'm trying to document the why (not user requirements) in a way that will help a programmer take over. Between fixing the odd bug, making the odd tweak, helping with some analysis and having a laugh on here, life's not too bad!
... and I'm counting the days!
Life is like a s**t sandwich; the more bread you have, the less s**t you eat.
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PhilLenoir wrote: the reasons "why" Other people's code will make a weak person run for the hills
It's an OO world.
public class SanderRossel : Lazy<Person>
{
public void DoWork()
{
throw new NotSupportedException();
}
}
My blog[ ^]
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Not MY code.
Life is like a s**t sandwich; the more bread you have, the less s**t you eat.
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I've spent the bulk of the last three days trying to test my code against a sandboxed web service I suspect if still in dev. Surprise validation errors, exception messages that tell me nothing, and having to deal with, and 'bring online' a new support person each day, have totally rewritten what I used to think stress was.
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Brady Kelly wrote: exception messages that tell me nothing
I always wanted to push to Prod an exception message that says something like "Move along, there is nothing to see here. These are not the errors you are looking for."
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Hahaha, that would be great. Pretend it slipped out; fell through the cracks.
What makes this worse is that there is some info the exception message - a little four char error code thingy that seems as meaningless to their devs as it is to me.
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Once, in some C code which took a param array, probably after a coffee deficiency, I set a returned error string "Unexpected number of errors."
We laughed and laughed.
Life is like a s**t sandwich; the more bread you have, the less s**t you eat.
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Frack! Already?! It sure snuck on me, this year I was gonna be ready for it.
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Don't stress about it.
Life is like a s**t sandwich; the more bread you have, the less s**t you eat.
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Oh, for God's sake!
The way these bluddy mother hens interfere with your life drives me round the fruggin bend!!!
God, I could...Grrrrrrrrrr!!!
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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Of the 364 stressful days before that.
Repeat every year.
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I wasn't stressed.
I had a nice little change to the default value of a radio button in a Winforms application.
I started it from Visual Studio, checked it all worked, exited the app.
Made my change to the initialization of a window that gets launched from the 'menu' window that starts up when you run the app.
Now the app will not run from Visual Studio.
It is getting nowhere near the code I changed.
Now I'm stressed.
Some men are born mediocre, some men achieve mediocrity, and some men have mediocrity thrust upon them.
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Sounds like a code rollback to me!
Life is like a s**t sandwich; the more bread you have, the less s**t you eat.
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OriginalGriff wrote: How about you lot: Showing signs of stress yet? Nope, everything under control
Bastard Programmer from Hell
If you can't read my code, try converting it here[^]
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