On Apr 7, 2006, at 10:54 PM, David Mann wrote:

On Apr 8, 2006, at 12:25 PM, Shel Belinkoff wrote:

Trying to read it straight through became a snooze real fast.

I tried that with a Javascript book once. Every lunchtime I'd read through about half a chapter.

A few chapters in I realised that it was too much to comprehend by itself, so I just sat down and started coding. The book has served as an excellent reference since then, although some of the API stuff at the back can be difficult to follow through the various interfaces.

- Dave (learns by doing, not by reading)

I tend to read books like "Real World Camera Raw..." in short spurts, stopping to experiment with new ideas or capabilities I hadn't realized existed before, seeing how to apply them to a theoretical problem. Once I get the gist of an idea, I read another little bit and do the same over again. Many of the things I've read in RWCR and other books on Photoshop remained relatively theoretical, back of my head stuff for a long time. Until I started processing work for real, for an exhibit or a client ...

Then I find that the concepts of how to get things done efficiently pop up. I may not remember how exactly they were done, but I know where to look. IN the course of putting together the "Ramsey" exhibit, I visited putting into practice my developed notiongs of RAW workflow, backup strategy, naming conventions, automating Photoshop, and about a dozen other things I'd learned over a year's time of studying the books and diddling a little at a time with concepts and ideas.

I feel we all learn better in our time and pace, by reading and by doing combined. The doing is very important ... need and motivation drive learning to new levels that way.

Godfrey


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