Also keep in mind that if you want your code to work, your grammar and punctuation in code has to be absolutely flawless. Writing English well is excellent practice for writing code well; writing English poorly is excellent practice for writing code poorly.
You get what you pay for. If you put in the effort, you will reap the reward. If you don't put in the effort, you will reap the reward of that instead, which is "teh suck"... :) On Sep 11, 2007, at 7:38 AM, Luke Paireepinart wrote: > max baseman wrote: >> lol sorry i was born with bad grammar and hand writing (although it's >> the bit after being born that matters) >> > Just imagine you're talking instead of writing. Everywhere you'd > put a > pause, put a comma. If it seems like the end of a sentence, put a > period. In most cases, even bad punctuation will be better than no > punctuation. People's inner monologues will just take on a > Christopher > Walken accent as they read over your e-mails, but this is arguably > not a > bad thing. > Grammar is something you can learn, not something inborn. Now is as > good > a time as any to start learning it. > -Luke > > _______________________________________________ > Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org > http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor -- -dave---------------------------------------------------------------- All I ask is that the kind of unsolvable that it turns out to be has respectable precedents. -Jerry Fodor _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor