I totally disagree with you. Because someone have learn the language in a class, Book or Video doesn't mean be is better than someone making hacks. Making hacks is mainly based around Memory and assembly language while using Computer science to avoid being detected (polymorphism). If many of these people will stop copy and pasting and Try to learn something, they might, learn the programming via experience. You can be in a book as long as your want, and because the book says a bool is a byte large you try to make the boolean = 52. I am just saying they are other ways to learn than school, teachers, books and videos.
I just like programming, that is all.
Current Stuff:
- GPU Programmer (Cuda)
- Client/Server (Cloud Server)
- Mobile App Development
Can you honestly show me 1 base that doesn't have somebody else's function or procedure in it??? I try to learn from the C++ bases here on the forum but they are all the same with no originality, they all call the the same classes and functions... They are just about all set out the same, Honestly there is no skill in that, Im sure I could "paste a base" together in no time and I don't even code in C++. Sorry if some coders get offended but I have to say you guys who learnt just from hacks need to get out in the real coding world....
P.s
If you do decide to have a code of between each other, Can I suggest it NOT being a hack as there is too many "Paste'r Base'rs" around here that has there External HD filled with snippets.. Instead get together and work on something that needs an all round coding skill, dealing with types structures, correctly formatted syntax ect..
Last edited by Departure; 05-23-2011 at 11:53 PM.
Actually, he does.
The definition of "being able to code" is fuzzy... However, I don't take someone who can code the grunt to be a coder. You need to be able to design to be considered a coder be myself. (Not graphics design, but proper program design). I find many "coders" lack it, and as a result create huge, unmanageable 1MB code files.
Let's see you try to update that 100,000 LoC file in a year's time.
+1
That's not possible, even if you're programming in Assembly (for us). Who created the assembly instruction interpreter/executer? Oh, that's right.