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Posted by Andrew DeFaria on 10/25/05 05:32
Ramon wrote:
> true what they say about old dogs not being able to learn new tricks,
> I see you have gottn quete worked up over ths issue, ok... IDEs are
> not for everyone. Keep training people to use TextPad and vi.
An "old dog" doesn't need new tricks when the old tricks work just fine.
Just because something is new does not mean that it's better.
> Infact you can do anything you like, talking to you is like talking to
> a brick wall, an old brick wall. To be honest I got better things to do.
I see you had time to waste here responding...
> Infact this is exactly the same as when I asked about shared memory
> allocation I think you were also the first fag to jump in and proove
> that you know everything about anything. And that your 50 years
> experience gives you an edge some how. IT&T is moving way to quick for
> someone to go and claim just because they written code in assembler or
> something else prehistoric that they know better.
At least he can spell... ;-)
And he doesn't need to "proove" it!
> And for your argument that you are training people for so many years,
> I don't give a flying shit who you train. Not all my lecture's were
> good. And perhaps you are quete average as well. After all marketing
> does have a large roll in *selling* education.
But the teachers are not usually the ones selling education - it's the
marketers that do that...
> So I'll repeat, I've worked in the commerce sector, now I am in
> education my self. And all the people over the 10 years who I showed
> Zend. And statisticly I'm sure that some of those programmers would
> have been good. Have all had a positive response about Zend. And I'm
> sure are using it to this day.
A vast majority of people eat at McDonalds. That doesn't mean that it's
good food...
> Anyway, my point is... if you are programming a PHP - with OO
> structure, obstraction layers. Zend is the way to go. That is all, you
> can argue until you are blue in the face that is not, I've used both
> approaches, and I can see the plain difference in department now.
> Right this second. Not 10-20 years ago. But Now.
Does nothing to negate the fact that IDEs may be fine for some people,
but not everybody...
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