I know what you mean but am not sure it's about pride. Trial and error, and guessing are key strategies people use to learn, expand and deploy their language skills. I'm always learning new things about perl when ignorance and incomprehensible documentation demand experimentation. It's also natural for acquired skills to settle into habitual patterns of unconscious behavior so they can be used spontaneously without having to think about them.

I agree with your conclusion that this tendency needs to be overcome when using language to speak with machines. They demand a much more exact grammer and syntax since the other constructs we habitually use to convey meaning such as inflection and body language don't apply (yet).

So I think that saying 'never guess at code' is a little too strict :-). Instead, guess away and learn new ways to do things, but always double check your guesses, and question your own coding habits.

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In reply to Re: Never guess at code! by epoptai
in thread Never guess at code! by nysus

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