Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#23
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Brian Reay" wrote:
: "Matthew Haigh" wrote in message : ... : In article , Custos Custodum : writes : Besides a mathematical inclination, an exceptionally good mastery of : one's native tongue is the most vital asset of a competent programmer. : : I'd disagree. I know many very good commercial programmers who can't : spell to save their lives. But what really matters is that they can't : spell _consistently_, so mis-spelled variables and function names are : mis-spelled the same way every time (or the compiler catches the error : and they correct it to be consistent with their other mis-spellings). : : Plus, of course, programming is not the hard bit- hasn't been for some time. : The skill lies in the system and software design. These days many packages : can autogenerate code and, with the high uP speeds and low memory costs, : that code is efficient enough to do the job- hand crafting to improve speed : etc often isn't required, even in real time apps. The move to the use of : real time operating systems has also reduced the demand for much of the core : software- one company can turn out versions (for example VxWorks, LynxOS) : that can serve many applications. The OEM manufacturer can focus just in his : particular needs, and pay a pitance of a fee to the RTOS supplier (sometimes : s few £) said m3osn who never was a "lowly programmer" : : Tends to leave a lot of the old hacker types on the scrap heap- often as not : claiming everyone else is the hacker. u mean the ones who actually know how to program properly ? |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|