It took me just a couple of hours to realize from TRYING to ask a pretty good question in other forums, and then i saw how really begginers ask questions, and it seemed to me soo stupid, BUT then i understood that You, The smart Monks, look at my posts as i looked at those pointless, meaningless, easily misunderstood and missing posts.
So i realized that I'm terribly sorry for my humiliating threas, and i prommise, from now on, to create only logic, normal posts after i can't find ABSOLUTELY nothing in ther docs; and i've agreed with myself that there's NO place like PerlMonks.org !!!

The Monastary kicks ass !

Replies are listed 'Best First'.
Re: Just a little something i've realized
by cLive ;-) (Prior) on Aug 16, 2004 at 19:28 UTC

    I realize your English isn't great, but you may find this useful.

    The only other advice is to add that when you are going to post, preview first. And then ask the question, "Does this question make me sound like an idiot?". Think about that one before posting. Please.

    Not "Does it show my ignorance or lack of knowledge?". That's fine. No, Really. It is.

    I don't know, you may just be fourteen and hey, puberty can be hard. Either way, showing a bit more consideration when posting will be appreciated by all.

    .02

    cLive ;-)

Re: Just a little something i've realized
by bradcathey (Prior) on Aug 16, 2004 at 23:07 UTC

    chiburashka, you have received much "advice" over the past couple of months as to how to ask a question and respond to those replying. The Monastery is indeed a fine place, with knowledgeable, reasonable people, but you still have to know the rules and tone of the place. Also, knowing *where* to ask your question or make your comment is helpful. I'm glad you're pleased with your "experience" here, but you should have posted this in Meditations. I look forward to seeing subsequent posts, but do review PM expectations in Tutorials.

    Update: NodeReaper got to the OP while I was replying to it. Apologies. I defer to the wisdom of NodeReaper.


    —Brad
    "Don't ever take a fence down until you know the reason it was put up." G. K. Chesterton

    janitored by ybiC: Reparented from reaped duplicate parent thread, as brother bradcathey's diplomacy and tact here are most exemplary

Re: Just a little something i've realized
by perlfan (Parson) on Aug 16, 2004 at 20:22 UTC
    You'll find that if you put some actual effort into trying to solve the problem yourself that you will not only reduce the number of "stupid" questions, but you will also actually learn something. I am not one to throw a RTFM at someone, but nothing frustrates me more than someone who has not tried to work/search through their problem first.
      TNX dudes,
      But I really try most of the timesto RTMF first (espessialy i like to read CPAN modules, by that i always find new modules that i might need with the "See Also" links).
        LAMO
Re: Just a little something i've realized
by zentara (Cardinal) on Aug 17, 2004 at 12:51 UTC
    This reminds me of something I learned back in school.

    "If you know the right question to ask, you already know the answer."

    Of course, the real problem is learning "what is the right question?" .....and that is what learning is all about.


    I'm not really a human, but I play one on earth. flash japh
Re: Just a little something i've realized
by Wassercrats (Initiate) on Aug 17, 2004 at 01:00 UTC

    i prommise, from now on, to create only logic, normal posts after i can't find ABSOLUTELY nothing in ther docs

    You shouldn't wait THAT long. The docs are complicated, even if your english is good, and the docs aren't even written or organized well. The only kinds of questions I don't like are those that indicate illegal or immoral motives.

    I don't consider too many questions to be stupid. A stupid question is something like "Should fish be allowed to walk backwards?" If your question is smarter than that, don't worry about it being stupid. But even if it is stupid, if you made some effort to find the answer and couldn't, ask.