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Don't worry about what anybody else is going to do. The best way to | |
predict the future is to invent it. | |
-- Alan Kay | |
Premature optimization is the root of all evil (or at least most of it) | |
in programming. | |
-- Donald Knuth | |
Lisp has jokingly been called "the most intelligent way to misuse a | |
computer". I think that description is a great compliment because it | |
transmits the full flavor of liberation: it has assisted a number of our | |
most gifted fellow humans in thinking previously impossible thoughts. | |
-- Edsger Dijkstra, CACM, 15:10 | |
Keep away from people who try to belittle your ambitions. Small people | |
always do that, but the really great make you feel that you, too, can | |
become great. | |
-- Mark Twain | |
What Paul does, and does very well, is to take ideas and concepts that | |
are beautiful in the abstract, and brings them down to a real world | |
level. That's a rare talent to find in writing these days. | |
-- Jeff "hemos" Bates, Director, OSDN; Co-evolver, Slashdot | |
Since programmers create programs out of nothing, imagination is our | |
only limitation. Thus, in the world of programming, the hero is the one | |
who has great vision. Paul Graham is one of our contemporary heroes. He | |
has the ability to embrace the vision, and to express it plainly. His | |
works are my favorites, especially the ones describing language design. | |
He explains secrets of programming, languages, and human nature that can | |
only be learned from the hacker experience. This book shows you his | |
great vision, and tells you the truth about the nature of hacking. | |
-- Yukihiro "Matz" Matsumoto, creator of Ruby | |
To follow the path: | |
look to the master, | |
follow the master, | |
walk with the master, | |
see through the master, | |
become the master. | |
-- Modern zen Poem | |
No problem should ever have to be solved twice. | |
-- Eric S. Raymond, How to become a hacker | |
Attitude is no substitute for competence. | |
-- Eric S. Raymond, How to become a hacker | |
It is said that the real winner is the one who lives in today but able | |
to see tomorrow. | |
-- Juan Meng, Reviewing "The future of ideas" by Lawrence Lessig | |
Fools ignore complexity. Pragmatists suffer it. Some can avoid it. | |
Geniuses remove it. | |
-- Alan J. Perlis (Epigrams in programming) | |
A year spent in artificial intelligence is enough to make one believe in | |
God. | |
-- Alan J. Perlis (Epigrams in programming) | |
Dealing with failure is easy: Work hard to improve. Success is also easy | |
to handle: You've solved the wrong problem. Work hard to improve. | |
-- Alan J. Perlis (Epigrams in programmi ng) | |
Within a computer natural language is unnatural. | |
-- Alan J. Perlis (Epigrams in programming) | |
You think you know when you learn, are more sure when you can write, | |
even more when you can teach, but certain when you can program. | |
-- Alan J. Perlis (Epigrams in programming) | |
Adapting old programs to fit new machines usually means adapting new | |
machines to behave like old ones. | |
-- Alan J. Perlis (Epigrams in programming) | |
A little learning is a dangerous thing. | |
-- Alexander Pope | |
Computer science education cannot make anybody an expert programmer any | |
more than studying brushes and pigment can make somebody an expert | |
painter. | |
-- Eric Raymond | |
Einstein argued that there must be simplified explanations of nature, | |
because God is not capricious or arbitrary. | |
-- Frederick P. Brooks, No Sliver Bullet. | |
Students should be evaluated on how well they can achieve the goals they | |
strived to achieve within a realistic context. Students need to learn to | |
do things, not know things. | |
-- Roger Schank, Engines for Education | |
We remember what we learn when we care about performing better and when | |
we believe that what we have been asked to do is representative of | |
reality. | |
-- Roger Schank, Engines for Education | |
There really is no learning without doing. | |
-- Roger Schank, Engines for Education | |
We really have to get over the idea that some stuff is just worth | |
knowing even if you never do anything with it. Human memories happily | |
erase stuff that has no purpose, so why try to fill up children's heads | |
with such stuff? | |
-- Roger Schank, Engines for Education | |
La tactique, c'est ce que vous faites quand il y a quelque chose à | |
faire; la stratégie, c'est ce que vous faites quand il n'y a rien à | |
faire. | |
-- Xavier Tartacover | |
The only problems we can really solve in a satisfactory manner are those | |
that finally admit a nicely factored solution. | |
-- E. W. Dijkstra, The humble programmer | |
The best way to learn to live with our limitations is to know them. | |
--E. W. Dijkstra, The humble programmer | |
This challenge, viz. the confrontation with the programming task, is so | |
unique that this novel experience can teach us a lot about ourselves. It | |
should deepen our understanding of the processes of design and creation, | |
it should give us better control over the task of organizing our | |
thoughts. If it did not do so, to my taste we should no deserve the | |
computer at all! It has allready taught us a few lessons, and the one I | |
have chosen to stress in this talk is the following. We shall do a much | |
better programming job, provided that we approach the task with a full | |
appreciation of its tremenduous difficulty, provided that we stick to | |
modest and elegant programming languages, provided that we respect the | |
intrinsec limitations of the human mind and approach the task as Very | |
Humble Programmers. | |
-- E. W. Dijkstra, The humble programmer | |
Ce n'est que par les relations qu'on entretient entre nos différentes | |
connaissances qu'elles nous restent accessibles. | |
-- Shnuup, sur l'hypertexte (SELFHTML -> Introduction -> Definitions sur l'hypertexte) | |
We now come to the decisive step of mathematical abstraction: we forget | |
about what the symbols stand for. ...[The mathematician] need not be | |
idle; there are many operations which he may carry out with these | |
symbols, without ever having to look at the things they stand for. | |
-- Hermann Weyl, The Mathematical Way of Thinking | |
An expert is, according to my working definition "someone who doesn't | |
need to look up answers to easy questions". | |
-- Eric Lippert. | |
The programmer must seek both perfection of part and adequacy of | |
collection. | |
-- Alan J. Perlis | |
Thus, programs must be written for people to read, and only incidentally | |
for machines to execute. | |
-- Alan J. Perlis | |
We control complexity by building abstractions that hide details when | |
appropriate. We control complexity by establishing conventional | |
interfaces that enable us to construct systems by combining standard, | |
well-understood pieces in a ``mix and match'' way. We control complexity | |
by establishing new languages for describing a design, each of which | |
emphasizes particular aspects of the design and deemphasizes others. | |
-- Alan J. Perlis | |
The acts of the mind, wherein it exerts its power over simple ideas, are | |
chiefly these three: 1. Combining several simple ideas into one compound | |
one, and thus all complex ideas are made. 2. The second is bringing two | |
ideas, whether simple or complex, together, and setting them by one | |
another so as to take a view of them at once, without uniting them into | |
one, by which it gets all its ideas of relations. 3. The third is | |
separating them from all other ideas that accompany them in their real | |
existence: this is called abstraction, and thus all its general ideas | |
are made. | |
-- John Locke, An Essay Concerning Human Understanding (1690) | |
Lisp programmers know the value of everything but the cost of nothing. | |
-- Alan J. Perlis | |
An interpreter raises the machine to the level of the user program; a | |
compiler lowers the user program to the level of the machine language. | |
-- SICP | |
Everything should be made as simple as possible, but no simpler. | |
-- Albert Einstein | |
The great dividing line between success and failure can be expressed in | |
five words: "I did not have time." | |
-- WestHost weekly newsletter 14 Feb 2003 | |
When your enemy is making a very serious mistake, don't be impolite and | |
disturb him. | |
-- Napoleon Bonaparte (allegedly) | |
A charlatan makes obscure what is clear; a thinker makes clear what is | |
obscure. | |
-- Hugh Kingsmill | |
There are two ways of constructing a software design; one way is to make | |
it so simple that there are obviously no deficiencies, and the other way | |
is to make it so complicated that there are no obvious deficiencies. The | |
first method is far more difficult. | |
-- C. A. R. Hoare | |
And if you go too far up, abstraction-wise, you run out of oxygen. | |
Sometimes smart thinkers just don't know when to stop, and they create | |
these absurd, all-encompassing, high-level pictures of the universe that | |
are all good and fine, but don't actually mean anything at all. | |
-- Joel Spolsky | |
The three chief virtues of a programmer are: Laziness, Impatience and | |
Hubris. | |
-- Larry Wall (Programming Perl) | |
All non-trivial abstractions, to some degree, are leaky. | |
-- Joel Spolsky (The Law of Leaky Abstractions) | |
XML wasn't designed to be edited by humans on a regular basis. | |
-- Guido van Rossum | |
Premature abstraction is an equally grevious sin as premature | |
optimization. | |
-- Keith Devens | |
You can have premature generalization as well as premature optimization. | |
-- Bjarne Stroustrup | |
He causes his sun to rise on the evil and the good, and sends rain on | |
the righteous and the unrighteous. | |
-- Matthew 5:45 | |
A language that doesn't affect the way you think about programming, is | |
not worth knowing. | |
-- Alan Perlis | |
Je n'ai fait celle-ci plus longue que parce que je n'ai pas eu le loisir | |
de la faire plus courte. (I have made this letter so long only because I | |
did not have the leisure to make it shorter.) | |
-- Blaise Pascal (Lettres Provinciales) | |
Men never do evil so completely and cheerfully as when they do it from | |
religious conviction. | |
-- Blaise Pascal (attributed) | |
Everybody makes their own fun. If you don't make it yourself, it ain't | |
fun -- it's entertainment. | |
-- David Mamet (as relayed by Joss Whedon) | |
If we wish to count lines of code, we should not regard them as *lines | |
produced* but as *lines spent*. | |
-- Edsger Dijkstra | |
Sometimes a man with too broad a perspective reveals himself as having | |
no real perspective at all. A man who tries too hard to see every side | |
may be a man who is trying to avoid choosing any side. A man who tries | |
too hard to seek a deeper truth may be trying to hide from the truth he | |
already knows. That is not a sign of intellectual sophistication and | |
"great thinking". It is a demonstration of moral degeneracy and | |
cowardice. | |
-- Steven Den Beste | |
Omit needless words. | |
-- William Strunk, Jr. (The Elements of Style) | |
I have never met a man so ignorant that I couldn't learn something from | |
him. | |
-- Galileo Galilei | |
A society that puts equality -- in the sense of equality of outcome -- | |
ahead of freedom will end up with neither equality nor freedom. The use | |
of force to achieve equality will destroy freedom, and the force, | |
introduced for good purposes, will end up in the hands of people who use | |
it to promote their own interests. | |
-- Milton Friedman (Thomas Sowell: A Conflict of Visions, p130) | |
Philosophy: the finding of bad reasons for what one believes by | |
instinct. | |
-- Brave New World (paraphrased) | |
Of all tyrannies a tyranny sincerely exercised for the good of its | |
victims may be the most oppressive. It may be better to live under | |
robber barons than under omnipotent moral busybodies, The robber baron's | |
cruelty may sometimes sleep, his cupidity may at some point be satiated; | |
but those who torment us for own good will torment us without end, for | |
they do so with the approval of their own conscience. | |
-- C.S. Lewis | |
Fools! Don't they know that tears are a woman's most effective weapon? | |
-- Catwoman (The Batman TV Series, episode 83) | |
It's like a condom; I'd rather have it and not need it than need it and | |
not have it. | |
-- some chick in Alien vs. Predator, when asked why she | |
always carries a gun | |
C++ is history repeated as tragedy. Java is history repeated as farce. | |
-- Scott McKay | |
Simplicity takes effort-- genius, even. | |
-- Paul Graham | |
Show, don't tell. | |
-- unknown | |
In God I trust; I will not be afraid. What can mortal man do to me? | |
-- David (Psalm 56:4) | |
Linux is only free if your time has no value. | |
-- Jamie Zawinski | |
Code is poetry. | |
-- wordpress.org | |
If you choose not to decide, you still have made a choice. | |
-- Rush (Freewill) | |
Civilization advances by extending the number of important operations | |
which we can perform without thinking about them. | |
-- Alfred North Whitehead (Introduction to Mathematics) | |
The function of wisdom is to discriminate between good and evil. | |
-- Cicero | |
The reason to do animation is caricature. Good caricature picks out the | |
essense of the statement and removes everything else. It's not simply | |
about reproducing reality; It's about bumping it up. | |
-- Brad Bird, writer and director, The Incredibles | |
Mistakes were made. | |
-- Ronald Reagan | |
I would rather be an optimist and be wrong than a pessimist who proves | |
to be right. The former sometimes wins, but never the latter. | |
-- "Hoots" | |
What is truth? | |
-- Pontius Pilate | |
Life moves pretty fast. If you don't stop and look around once in a | |
while, you could miss it. | |
-- Ferris Bueller | |
Lisp is worth learning for the profound enlightenment experience you | |
will have when you finally get it; that experience will make you a | |
better programmer for the rest of your days, even if you never actually | |
use Lisp itself a lot. | |
-- Eric S. Raymond | |
Any sufficiently complicated C or Fortran program contains an ad hoc, | |
informally specified, bug-ridden, slow implementation of half of Common | |
Lisp. | |
-- Philip Greenspun (Greenspun's Tenth Rule) | |
I was talking recently to a friend who teaches at MIT. His field is hot | |
now and every year he is inundated by applications from would-be | |
graduate students. "A lot of them seem smart," he said. "What I can't | |
tell is whether they have any kind of taste." | |
-- Paul Graham | |
The direct pursuit of happiness is a recipe for an unhappy life. | |
-- Donald Campbell | |
It's no trick for talented people to be interesting, but it's a gift to | |
be interested. We want an organization filled with interested people. | |
-- Randy S. Nelson (dean of Pixar University) | |
Why teach drawing to accountants? Because drawing class doesn't just | |
teach people to draw. It teaches them to be more observant. There's no | |
company on earth that wouldn't benefit from having people become more | |
observant. | |
-- Randy S. Nelson (dean of Pixar University) | |
All problems in computer science can be solved by another level of | |
indirection. | |
-- Butler Lampson | |
A designer knows he has arrived at perfection not when there is no | |
longuer anything to add, but when there is no longuer anything to take | |
away. | |
-- Antoine de St Exupery. | |
For the things we have to learn before we can do them, we learn by doing | |
them. | |
-- Aristotle. | |
There are many ways to avoid success in life, but the most sure-fire | |
just might be procrastination. | |
-- Hara Estroff Marano. | |
PI seconds is a nanocentury. | |
-- [fact] | |
A non negative binary integer value x is a power of 2 iff (x & (x-1)) is | |
0 using 2's complement arithmetic. | |
-- [fact] | |
While I’ve always appreciated beautiful code, I share Jonathan’s concern | |
about studying it too much. I think studying beauty in music and | |
painting has led us to modern classical music and painting that the | |
majority of us just don’t get. Beauty can be seen when it emerges, but | |
isn’t something to strive for in isolation of a larger context. In the | |
software world, the larger context would be the utility of the software | |
to the end user. | |
-- [A comment on a blog] | |
Dont give users the opportunity to lock themselves. | |
-- unknown | |
Any fool can make the simple complex, only a smart person can make the | |
complex simple. | |
-- unknown | |
To do something well you have to love it. So to the extent you can | |
preserve hacking as something you love, you're likely to do it well. Try | |
to keep the sense of wonder you had about programming at age 14. If | |
you're worried that your current job is rotting your brain, it probably | |
is. | |
-- Paul Graham. | |
- If you give him a penny for his thoughts, you'd get change. | |
- Not the sharpest knife in the drawer. | |
- A prime candidate for natural deselection. | |
-- [Ideas for flamewars] | |
What I didn't understand was that the value of some new acquisition | |
wasn't the difference between its retail price and what I paid for it. | |
It was the value I derived from it. Stuff is an extremely illiquid | |
asset. Unless you have some plan for selling that valuable thing you got | |
so cheaply, what difference does it make what it's "worth?" The only way | |
you're ever going to extract any value from it is to use it. And if you | |
don't have any immediate use for it, you probably never will. | |
-- Paul Graham | |
Only bad designers blame their failings on the users. | |
-- unknown | |
Humans aren't rational -- they rationalize. And I don't just mean "some | |
of them" or "other people". I'm talking about everyone. We have a "logic | |
engine" in our brains, but for the most part, it's not the one in the | |
driver's seat -- instead it operates after the fact, generating | |
rationalizations and excuses for our behavior. | |
-- Paul Buchheit | |
What do Americans look for in a car? I've heard many answers when I've | |
asked this question. The answers include excellent safety ratings, great | |
gas mileage, handling, and cornering ability, among others. I don't | |
believe any of these. That's because the first principle of the Culture | |
Code is that the only effective way to understand what people truly mean | |
is to ignore what they say. This is not to suggest that people | |
intentionally lie or misrepresent themselves. What it means is that, | |
when asked direct questions about their interests and preferences, | |
people tend to give answers they believe the questioner wants to hear. | |
Again, this is not because they intend to mislead. It is because people | |
respond to these questions with their cortexes, the parts of their | |
brains that control intelligence rather than emotion or instinct. They | |
ponder a question, they process a question, and when they deliver an | |
answer, it is the product of deliberation. They believe they are telling | |
the truth. A lie detector would confirm this. In most cases, however, | |
they aren't saying what they mean. | |
-- The culture code. | |
When all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail. | |
-- unknown | |
Good coders code, great reuse. | |
-- http://www.catonmat.net | |
The lesson of the story might appear to be that self-interested and | |
ambitious people in power are often the cause of wastefulness in | |
developing countries. But self-interested and ambitious people are in | |
positions of power, great and small, all over the world. In many places, | |
they are restrained by the law, the press, and democratic opposition. | |
Cameroon's tragedy is that there is nothing to hold self-interest in | |
check. | |
-- Tim Harford | |
To solve your problems you must learn new skills, adapt new thought | |
patterns, and become a different person than you were before that | |
problem. God has crafted you for success. In the middle of every | |
adversity lie your best opportunities. Discover it, build upon it and | |
move forward in your journey to live an extraordinary life. You owe it | |
to yourself to live a great life. Don’t let negative thoughts pull you | |
down. Be grateful and open to learn and grow. | |
-- http://secretsofstudying.com/ | |
If there is a will, there is a way. | |
-- unknown | |
Having large case statements in an object-oriented language is a sure | |
sign your design is flawed. | |
-- [Fixing architecture flaws in Rails' ORM] | |
Being a programmer is the same way. The only way to be a good programmer | |
is to write code. When you realize you haven't been writing much code | |
lately, and it seems like all you do is brag about code you wrote in the | |
past, and people start looking at you funny while you're shooting your | |
mouth off, realize it's because they know. They might not even know they | |
know, but they know. So, yes, doing what you love brings success, and by | |
all means, throw yourself a nice big party, buy yourself a nice car, | |
soak up the adulation of an adoring crowd. Then shut the fuck up and get | |
back to work. | |
-- Sincerity Theory | |
Another feature about this guy is his low threshold of boredom. He'll | |
pick up on a task and work frantically at it, accomplishing wonders in a | |
short time and then get bored and drop it before its properly finished. | |
He'll do nothing but strum his guitar and lie around in bed for several | |
days after. Thats also part of the pattern too; periods of frenetic | |
activity followed by periods of melancholia, withdrawal and inactivity. | |
This is a bipolar personality. | |
-- The bipolar lisp programmer | |
My dream is that people adopt it on its own merits. We're not trying to | |
bend Ruby on Rails to fit the enterprise, we're encouraging enterprises | |
to bend to Ruby on Rails. Come if you like it, stay away if you don't. | |
We're not going head over heels to accommodate the enterprise or to lure | |
them away from Java. That's how you end up with Java, if you start | |
bending to special interest groups. | |
-- David Heinemeier Hansson (Ruby On Rails' creator) | |
New eyes have X-ray vision. [someone that hasn't written it is more | |
likely to spot the bug. "someone" can be you after a break] | |
-- William S. Annis | |
So - what are the most important problems in software engineering? I’d | |
answer “dealing with complexity”. | |
-- Mark Chu-Carroll | |
So the mere constraint of staying in regular contact with us will push | |
you to make things happen, because otherwise you'll be embarrassed to | |
tell us that you haven't done anything new since the last time we | |
talked. | |
-- Paul Graham (a talk at Y Combinator, for startup creators). | |
The choice of the university is mostly important for the piece of paper | |
you get at the end. The education you get depends on you. | |
-- Andreas Zwinkau | |
Remember that you are humans in the first place and only after that | |
programmers. | |
-- Alexandru Vancea | |
Humans differ from animals to the degree that they are not merely an end | |
result of their conditioning, but are able to reflect on their | |
experiences and strategies, and apply insight to make changes in the way | |
they live to modify the outcome. | |
-- SlideTrombone (comment on "Programming can ruin your life") | |
As builders and creators finding the perfect solution should not be our | |
main goal. We should find the perfect problem. | |
-- Isaac (blog comment) | |
Just like carpentry, measure twice cut once. | |
-- Super-sizing YouTube with Python (Mike Solomon, [email protected]) | |
The good thing about reinventing the wheel is that you get a round one. | |
-- Douglas Crockford (Author of JSON and JsLint) | |
I feel it is everybodies obligation to reach for the best in themselves | |
and use that for the interest of mankind. | |
-- Corneluis (comment on 'Are you going to change the world? (Really?)') | |
Abstraction is a form of data compression: absolutely necessary, because | |
human short-term memory is so small, but the critically important aspect | |
of abstraction is the algorithm that gets you from the name back to the | |
"uncompressed" details. | |
-- Bruce Wilder (blog post comment) | |
Have you ever noticed that when you sit down to write something, half | |
the ideas that end up in it are ones you thought of while writing it? | |
The same thing happens with software. Working to implement one idea | |
gives you more ideas. | |
-- Paul Graham, The other road ahead. | |
In general, we can think of data as defined by some collection of | |
selectors and constructors, together with specified conditions that | |
these procedures must fulfill in order to be a valid representation. | |
-- SICP, What is meant by data? | |
Resume writing is just like dating, or applying for a bank loan, in that | |
nobody wants you if you're desperate. | |
-- Steve Yegge. | |
Mastering isn’t a survival instinct; it’s an urge to excel. Mastering is | |
one of the experiences that delineates us from animals. It is striving | |
to be more tomorrow than we are today; to perfectly pitch the ball over | |
home plate; to craft the perfect sentence in an article; to open the | |
oven and feel the warm, richly-scented cloud telling you dinner is going | |
to be absolutely extraordinary. We humans crave perfection, to be | |
masters of our domain, to distinguish ourselves by sheer skill and | |
prowess. | |
-- Joesgoals.com | |
It(mastering)’s knowing what you are doing. | |
-- Joesgoals.com | |
Well then. How could you possibly live without automated refactoring | |
tools? How else could you coordinate the caterpillar-like motions of all | |
Java’s identical tiny legs, its thousands of similar parts? | |
I’ll tell you how: | |
Ruby is a butterfly. | |
-- Stevey, Refactoring Trilogy, Part 1. | |
You will never become a Great Programmer until you acknowledge that you | |
will always be a Terrible Programmer. | |
You will remain a Great Programmer for only as long as you acknowledge | |
that you are still a Terrible Programmer. | |
-- Marc (http://kickin-the-darkness.blogspot.com/) | |
If I tell you I'm good, you would probably think I'm boasting. If I tell | |
you I'm no good, you know I'm lying. | |
-- Bruce Lee | |
Let me try to get this straight: Lisp is a language for describing | |
algorithms. This was JohnMcCarthy's original purpose, anyway: to build | |
something more convenient than a Turing machine. Lisp is not about file, | |
socket or GUI programming - Lisp is about expressive power. (For | |
example, you can design multiple object systems for Lisp, in Lisp. Or | |
implement the now-fashionable AOP. Or do arbitrary transformations on | |
parsed source code.) If you don't value expressive power, Lisp ain't for | |
you. I, personally, would prefer Lisp to not become mainstream: this | |
would necessarily involve a dumbing down. | |
-- VladimirSlepnev | |
Je ne vous impose aucune contrainte, aucune limite. Surprenez-moi, | |
étonnez-moi, défiez-moi, défiez-vous vous-même. Vous avez le choix: vous | |
pouvez rester dans l'ombre ou en sortir en étant parmis les trop rares | |
exceptions à avoir réussi. L'heure est venue d'aller bien au delà de | |
votre potentiel. L'heure est venue maintenant de descendre vraiment en | |
vous. L'heure est venue de démontrer pourquoi vous êtes l'élite, les | |
quelques élus, les rares lueurs qui offrent à cette compagnie son | |
caractère exceptionnel, sa luminescence. | |
-- Le PDG de NURV, dans "Anti-trust". | |
If something isn’t working, you need to look back and figure out what | |
got you excited in the first place. | |
-- David Gorman (ImThere.com) | |
Opportunities that present themselves to you are the consequence -- at | |
least partially -- of being in the right place at the right time. They | |
tend to present themselves when you're not expecting it -- and often | |
when you are engaged in other activities that would seem to preclude you | |
from pursuing them. And they come and go quickly -- if you don't jump | |
all over an opportunity, someone else generally will and it will vanish. | |
-- Marc Andreessen (http://blog.pmarca.com/) | |
Pay attention to opportunity cost at all times. Doing one thing means | |
not doing other things. This is a form of risk that is very easy to | |
ignore, to your detriment. | |
-- Marc Andreessen (http://blog.pmarca.com/) | |
Seize any opportunity, or anything that looks like opportunity. They are | |
rare, much rarer than you think... | |
-- Nassim Nicholas Taleb, "The Black Swan". | |
I think that a lot of programmers are ignoring an important point when | |
people talk about reducing code repetition on large projects. | |
Part of the idea is that large projects are intrinsically *wrong*. That | |
you should be looking at making a number of smaller projects that are | |
composable, even if you never end up reusing one of those smaller | |
projects elsewhere. | |
-- Dan Nugent | |
We tend to seek easy, single-factor explanations of success. For most | |
important things, though, success actually requires avoiding many | |
separate causes of failure. | |
-- Jared Diamond | |
Things which matter most must never be at the mercy of things which | |
matter least. | |
-- Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe (1749-1832) | |
I think the root of your mistake is saying that macros don't scale to | |
larger groups. The real truth is that macros don't scale to stupider | |
groups. | |
-- Paul Graham, on the Lightweight Languages mailing list. | |
Argue with idiots, and you become an idiot. | |
If you compete with slaves you become a slave. | |
-- Paul Graham and Norbert Weiner, respectively | |
Always dive down into a problem and get your hands on the deepest issue | |
behind the problem. All other considerations are to dismissed as | |
"engineering details"; they can be sorted out after the basic problem | |
has been solved. | |
-- Chris Crawford | |
Don't have good ideas if you aren't willing to be responsible for them. | |
-- Alan Perlis | |
It is impossible to sharpen a pencil with a blunt axe. It is equally | |
vain to try to do it with ten blunt axes instead. | |
-- Edsger Dijkstra | |
If we wish to count lines of code, we should not regard them as lines | |
produced but as lines spent. | |
-- Edsger Dijkstra | |
The most damaging phrase in the language is, It's always been done that | |
way. | |
-- Rear Admiral Grace Hopper | |
Getting back to failing early, I've learned it's important to completely | |
fail. Get fired. Shoot the project, then burn its corpse. Melt the CVS | |
repository and microwave the backup CDs. When things go wrong, I've | |
often tried to play the hero from start to finish. Guess what? Some | |
projects are doomed no matter what. Some need skills I don't possess. | |
And some need a fresh face. | |
-- Reginald Braithwaite | |
The only thing a man should ever be 100% convinced of is his own | |
ignorance. | |
-- DJ MacLean | |
The best people and organizations have the attitude of wisdom: The | |
courage to act on what they know right now and the humility to change | |
course when they find better evidence. | |
The quest for management magic and breakthrough ideas is overrated; | |
being a master of the obvious is underrated. | |
Jim Maloney is right: Work is an overrated activity | |
-- Bob Sutton | |
In theory, there’s no difference between theory and practice. But in | |
practice, there is. | |
-- Albert Einstein | |
Act from reason, and failure makes you rethink and study harder. | |
Act from faith, and failure makes you blame someone and push harder. | |
-- Erik Naggum | |
Measure everything you can about the product, and you'll start seeing | |
patterns. | |
-- Max Levchin, PayPal founder, Talk at StartupSchool2007 | |
Something Confusing about "Hard": | |
It's tempting to think that if it's hard, then it's valuable. | |
Most valuable things are hard. | |
Most hard things are completely useless -- (picture of someone smashing | |
their head through concrete blocks kung-fu style). | |
Hard DOES NOT EQUATE TO BEING valuable. | |
Remember Friendster back in the day? | |
You'd sign in, invite friends, have 25 friends, go to their profile, and | |
then it'd show how you were connected to each one. | |
That's an impressive [some geeky CS jargon] Cone traversal of a tree - | |
100 million string comparisons per page -- it won't scale. | |
Used to take a minute per page to load, and Friendster died a painful | |
death. | |
MySpace -- not interested in solving problems | |
They use the shortcut of "Miss Fitzpatrick is in your extended network" | |
(i.e. even when you're not even signed up for MySpace) | |
They didn't solve the hard problem. But they make the more relevant | |
assumption that you want to be connected to hot women. [LOL] | |
Shows Alexa graph showing that in early 2005 Myspace took off, and | |
quickly bypassed Friendster and never looked back. | |
-- Max Levchin, PayPal founder, Talk at StartupSchool2007 | |
Quality of the people is better than the quality of the business idea. | |
Crappy people can screw up the best idea in the world. | |
-- Hadi Partovi & Ali Partovi (iLike.com), Talk at StartupSchool2007 | |
The only constant in the world of hi-tech is change. | |
-- Mark Ward | |
Write it properly first. It's easier to make a correct program fast, | |
than to make a fast program correct. | |
-- http://www.cpax.org.uk/prg/ | |
J'ai toujours préféré la folie des passions à la sagesse de | |
l'indifférence. | |
-- Anatole France | |
You can’t get to version 500 if you don’t start with a version 1. | |
-- BetterExplained.com | |
The wonderful and frustrating thing about understanding yourself is that | |
nobody can do it for you. | |
-- BetterExplained.com | |
When you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however | |
improbable, must be the truth. | |
-- Sherlock Holmes | |
In order to understand what another person is saying, you must assume | |
that it is true and try to find out what it could be true of. | |
-- George Miller | |
A journey of a thousand miles must begin with a single step. | |
-- LaoTzu | |
C’s great for what it’s great for. | |
-- Ben Hoyts (micropledge) | |
There is one meaning [for static in C]: a global variable that is | |
invisible outside the current scope, be it a function or a file. | |
-- Paolo Bonzini | |
Processors don't get better so that they can have more free time. | |
Processors get better so _you_ can have more free time. | |
-- LeCamarade (freeshells.ch) | |
The venerable master Qc Na was walking with his student, Anton. Hoping to | |
prompt the master into a discussion, Anton said "Master, I have heard that | |
objects are a very good thing - is this true?" Qc Na looked pityingly at | |
his student and replied, "Foolish pupil - objects are merely a poor man's | |
closures." | |
Chastised, Anton took his leave from his master and returned to his cell, | |
intent on studying closures. He carefully read the entire "Lambda: The | |
Ultimate..." series of papers and its cousins, and implemented a small | |
Scheme interpreter with a closure-based object system. He learned much, and | |
looked forward to informing his master of his progress. | |
On his next walk with Qc Na, Anton attempted to impress his master by | |
saying "Master, I have diligently studied the matter, and now understand | |
that objects are truly a poor man's closures." Qc Na responded by hitting | |
Anton with his stick, saying "When will you learn? Closures are a poor man's | |
object." At that moment, Anton became enlightened. | |
-- Anton van Straaten (Na = Norman Adams, Qa = Christian Queinnec) | |
Understanding why C++ is the way it is helps a programmer use it well. A deep | |
understanding of a tool is essential for an expert craftsman. | |
-- Bjarne Stroustrap | |
No art, however minor, demands less than total dedication if you want to | |
excel in it. | |
-- Alberti | |
The minute you put the blame on someone else you’ve switch things from | |
being a problem you can control to a problem outside of your control. | |
-- engtech (internetducttape.com) | |
State is the root of all evil. In particular functions with side effects | |
should be avoided. | |
-- OO Sucks (bluetail.com) | |
Ils ne sont pas forts parce qu'ils sont forts. Ils sont forts parce que | |
nous sommes faibles. | |
-- Ragala Khalid | |
It is better to be quiet and thought a fool than to open your mouth and | |
remove all doubt. | |
-- WikiHow | |
A tail call allows a function to return the result of another function | |
without leaving an entry on the stack. Tail recursion is a specific case | |
of tail calling. | |
-- ASPN : Python Cookbook : Explicit Tail Call | |
Simplicity means the achievement of maximum effect with minimum means. | |
-- Dr. Koichi Kawana | |
Normality is the route to nowhere. | |
-- Ridderstrale & Nordstorm, Funky Business | |
The problem is that Microsoft just has no taste. And I don't mean that | |
in a small way, I mean that in a big way. | |
-- Steve Jobs | |
Do you want to sell sugared water all your life or do you want to change | |
the world? | |
-- Steve Jobs, to John Sculley (former Pepsi executive) | |
1 - Creativity and innovation always build on the past. | |
2 - The past always tries to control the creativity that builds on it. | |
3 - Free societies enable the future by limiting the past. | |
4 - Ours is less and less a free society. | |
-- Lawrence Lessig, Free Culture. | |
Good work is no done by ‘humble’ men. | |
-- H. Hardy, A mathematician's apology. | |
Simplicity and pragmatism beat complexity and theory any day. | |
-- Dennis (blog comment) | |
The proof is by reductio ad absurdum, and reductio ad absurdum, which | |
Euclid loved so much, is one of a mathematician’s finest weapons. It is | |
a far finer gambit than any chess gambit: a chess player may offer the | |
sacrifice of a pawn or even a piece, but a mathematician offers the | |
game. | |
-- G. H. Hardy | |
Remember, always be yourself ... unless you suck! | |
-- Joss Whedon | |
All great things require great dedication. | |
-- Chuck Norris(?) | |
I'm always happy to trade performance for readability as long as the | |
former isn't already scarce. | |
-- Crayz (Commentor on blog.raganwald.com) | |
You have to write for your audience. I would never write (1..5).map | |
&'*2' in Java when I could write | |
ListFactoryFactory.getListFactoryFromResource( | |
new ResourceName('com.javax.magnitudes.integers'). | |
setLowerBound(1).setUpperBound(5).setStep(1).applyFunctor( | |
new Functor () { public void eval (x) { return x * 2; } })) | |
I'm simplifying, of course, I've left out the security and logging | |
wrappers. | |
-- Reginald Braithwait | |
The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again | |
and expecting different results. | |
-- Benjamin Franklin | |
A no uttered from the deepest conviction is better than a yes merely | |
uttered to please or what is worse, to avoid trouble. | |
-- Mahatma Gandhi | |
I think it is wise, and only honest, to warn you that my goal is | |
immodest. It is not my purpose to "transfer knowledge" to you that, | |
subsequently, you can forget again. My purpose is no less than to | |
effectuate in each of you a noticeable, irreversable change. I want you | |
to gain, for the rest of your lives, the insight that beautiful proofs | |
are not "found" by trial anf error but are the result of a consciously | |
applied design discipline. I want you to raise your quality standards. I | |
mean, if 10 years from now, when you are doing something quick and | |
dirty, you suddenly visualize that I am looking over your shoulders and | |
say to yourself "Dijkstra would not have liked this", well, that would | |
be enough immortality for me. | |
-- E. W. Dijkstra | |
The general principle for complexity design is this: Think locally, act | |
locally. | |
-- Richard P. Gabriel & Ron Goldman, Mob Software: The Erotic Life of Code | |
Programming is the art of figuring out what you want so precisely that | |
even a machine can do it. | |
-- Some guy who isn't famous | |
Hence my urgent advice to all of you to reject the morals of the | |
bestseller society and to find, to start with, your reward in your own | |
fun. This is quite feasible, for the challenge of simplification is so | |
fascinating that, if we do our job properly, we shall have the greatest | |
fun in the world. | |
-- E. W. Dijkstra, On the nature of computing science. | |
Remember: you are alone. Every time you can get help from someone, | |
it is an opportunity: you should eagerly size it. But then, promptly | |
return to normal mode: you are alone and you must be prepared to solve | |
every problem yourself. | |
-- Eric KEDJI | |
Making All Software Into Tools Reduces Risk. | |
-- smoothspan.com | |
Some may say Ruby is a bad rip-off of Lisp or Smalltalk, and I admit | |
that. But it is nicer to ordinary people. | |
-- Matz, LL2 | |
C and Lisp stand at opposite ends of the spectrum; they're each great at | |
what the other one sucks at. | |
-- Steve Yegge, Tour de Babel. | |
Two people should stay together if together they are better people than | |
they would be individually. | |
-- ? | |
To the optimist, the glass is half full. To the pessimist, the glass is | |
half empty. To the engineer, the glass is twice as big as it needs to | |
be. | |
-- author unknown (quoted in `Robust Systems', Gerald Jay Suseman) | |
It is practically impossible to teach good programming to students that | |
have had a prior exposure to BASIC: as potential programmers they are | |
mentally mutilated beyond hope of regeneration. | |
-- Edsger Dijkstra | |
Whatever is worth doing at all, is worth doing well. | |
-- Earl of Chesterfield | |
Rules of Optimization: | |
Rule 1: Don’t do it. | |
Rule 2 (for experts only): Don’t do it yet. | |
-- M.A. Jackson | |
More computing sins are committed in the name of efficiency (without | |
necessarily achieving it) than for any other single reason - including | |
blind stupidity. | |
-- W.A. Wulf | |
We should forget about small efficiencies, say about 97% of the time: | |
premature optimization is the root of all evil. | |
-- Donald Knuth | |
The best is the enemy of the good. | |
-- Voltaire | |
The job of a leader today is not to create followers. It’s to create | |
more leaders. | |
-- Ralph Nader | |
The president was visiting NASA headquarters and stopped to talk to a | |
man who was holding a mop. “And what do you do?” he asked. The man, a | |
janitor, replied, “I’m helping to put a man on the moon, sir.” | |
-- The little book of leadership | |
Only make new mistakes. | |
-- Phil Dourado | |
You can recognize truth by its beauty and simplicity. When you get it | |
right, it is obvious that it is right. | |
-- Richard Feynman | |
Talkers are no good doers. | |
-- William Shakespeare, "Henry VI" | |
Photography is painting with light. | |
-- Eric Hamilton | |
Good artists copy. Great artists steal. | |
-- Pablo Picasso | |
A guideline in the process of stepwise refinement should be the | |
principle to decompose decisions as much as possible, to untangle | |
aspects which are only seemingly interdependent, and to defer those | |
decisions which concern details of representation as long as possible. | |
-- Niklaus Wirth | |
Vigorous writing is concise. A sentence should contain no unnecessary | |
words, a paragraph no unnecessary sentences, for the same reason that a | |
drawing should have no unnecessary lines and a machine no unnecessary | |
parts. This requires not that the writer make all sentences short or | |
avoid all detail and treat subjects only in outline, but that every word | |
tell. | |
-- William Strunk, Jr. (The Elements of Style) | |
The problem is that small examples fail to convince, and large examples | |
are too big to follow. | |
-- Steve Yegge. | |
We are the sum of our behaviours; excellence therefore is not an act but | |
a habit. | |
-- Aristotle. | |
The purpose of abstraction is not to be vague, but to create a new | |
semantic level in which one can be absolutely precise. | |
-- Edsger Dijkstra | |
Every man prefers belief to the exercise of judgment. | |
-- Seneca | |
It’s hard to grasp abstractions if you don’t understand what they’re | |
abstracting away from. | |
-- Nathan Weizenbaum | |
That is one of the most distinctive differences between school and the | |
real world: there is no reward for putting in a good effort. In fact, | |
the whole concept of a "good effort" is a fake idea adults invented to | |
encourage kids. It is not found in nature. | |
-- Paul Graham | |
I find that the harder I work, the more luck I seem to have. | |
-- Thomas Jefferson | |
Don't stay in bed, unless you can make money in bed. | |
-- George Burns | |
If everything seems under control, you're not going fast enough. | |
-- Mario Andretti | |
Chance favors the prepared mind. | |
-- Louis Pasteur | |
Controlling complexity is the essence of computer programming. | |
-- Brian Kernigan | |
The function of good software is to make the complex appear to be | |
simple. | |
-- Grady Booch | |
Programmers are in a race with the Universe to create bigger and better | |
idiot-proof programs, while the Universe is trying to create bigger and | |
better idiots. So far the Universe is winning. | |
-- Rich Cook | |
A hacker on a roll may be able to produce–in a period of a few | |
months–something that a small development group (say, 7-8 people) would | |
have a hard time getting together over a year. IBM used to report that | |
certain programmers might be as much as 100 times as productive as other | |
workers, or more. | |
-- Peter Seebach | |
The best programmers are not marginally better than merely good ones. | |
They are an order-of-magnitude better, measured by whatever standard: | |
conceptual creativity, speed, ingenuity of design, or problem-solving | |
ability. | |
-- Randall E. Stross | |
A great lathe operator commands several times the wage of an average | |
lathe operator, but a great writer of software code is worth 10,000 | |
times the price of an average software writer. | |
-- Bill Gates | |
Measuring programming progress by lines of code is like measuring | |
aircraft building progress by weight. | |
-- Bill Gates | |
First learn computer science and all the theory. Next develop a | |
programming style. Then forget all that and just hack. | |
-- George Carrette | |
To iterate is human, to recurse divine. | |
-- L. Peter Deutsch | |
The best thing about a boolean is even if you are wrong, you are only | |
off by a bit. | |
-- Anonymous | |
Should array indices start at 0 or 1? My compromise of 0.5 was rejected | |
without, I thought, proper consideration. | |
-- Stan Kelly-Bootle | |
The use of COBOL cripples the mind; its teaching should therefore be | |
regarded as a criminal offense. | |
-- E.W. Dijkstra | |
It is practically impossible to teach good programming style to students | |
that have had prior exposure to BASIC. As potential programmers, they | |
are mentally mutilated beyond hope of regeneration. | |
-- E. W. Dijkstra | |
One of the main causes of the fall of the Roman Empire was that–lacking | |
zero–they had no way to indicate successful termination of their C | |
programs. | |
-- Robert Firth | |
Saying that Java is nice because it works on all OSes is like saying | |
that anal sex is nice because it works on all genders. | |
-- Alanna | |
If Java had true garbage collection, most programs would delete | |
themselves upon execution. | |
-- Robert Sewell | |
Software is like sex: It’s better when it’s free. | |
-- Linus Torvalds | |
Any code of your own that you haven’t looked at for six or more months | |
might as well have been written by someone else. | |
-- Eagleson’s Law | |
Good programmers use their brains, but good guidelines save us having to | |
think out every case. | |
-- Francis Glassborow | |
Considering the current sad state of our computer programs, software | |
development is clearly still a black art, and cannot yet be called an | |
engineering discipline. | |
-- Bill Clinton | |
If debugging is the process of removing bugs, then programming must be | |
the process of putting them in. | |
-- Edsger W. Dijkstra | |
Always code as if the guy who ends up maintaining your code will be a | |
violent psychopath who knows where you live. | |
-- Martin Golding | |
Everything that can be invented has been invented. | |
-- Charles H. Duell, Commissioner, U.S. Office of Patents, 1899 | |
I think there’s a world market for about 5 computers. | |
-- Thomas J. Watson, Chairman of the Board, IBM, circa 1948 | |
It would appear that we have reached the limits of what it is possible | |
to achieve with computer technology, although one should be careful with | |
such statements, as they tend to sound pretty silly in 5 years. | |
-- John Von Neumann, circa 1949 | |
But what is it good for? | |
-- Engineer at the Advanced Computing Systems Division of IBM, | |
commenting on the microchip, 1968 | |
There is no reason for any individual to have a computer in his home. | |
-- Ken Olson, President, Digital Equipment Corporation, 1977 | |
640K ought to be enough for anybody. | |
-- Bill Gates, 1981 | |
Windows NT addresses 2 Gigabytes of RAM, which is more than any | |
application will ever need. | |
-- Microsoft, on the development of Windows NT, 1992 | |
We will never become a truly paper-less society until the Palm Pilot | |
folks come out with WipeMe 1.0. | |
-- Andy Pierson | |
If it keeps up, man will atrophy all his limbs but the push-button | |
finger. | |
-- Frank Lloyd Wright | |
Functional programming is like describing your problem to a | |
mathematician. Imperative programming is like giving instructions to | |
an idiot. | |
-- arcus, #scheme on Freenode | |
Its a shame that the students of our generation grew up with windows and | |
mice because that tainted our mindset not to think in terms of powerful | |
tools. Some of us are just so tainted that we will never recover. | |
-- Jeffrey Mark Siskind <[email protected]> in comp.lang.lisp | |
Lisp is a programmable programming language. | |
-- John Foderaro | |
I guess, when you're drunk, every woman looks beautiful and every | |
language looks (like) a Lisp :) | |
-- Lament, #[email protected] | |
Many of life's failures are people who did not realize how close they | |
were to success when they gave up. | |
-- Thomas Edison | |
You must always work not just within but below your means. If you can | |
handle three elements, handle only two. If you can handle ten, then | |
handle five. In that way the ones you do handle, you handle with more | |
ease, more mastery and you create a feeling of strength in reserve. | |
-- Pablo Picasso | |
When you’ve got the code all ripped apart, it’s like a car that’s all | |
disassembled. You’ve got all the parts tying all over your garage and | |
you have to replace the broken part or the car will never run. It’s not | |
fun until the code gets back to the baseline again. | |
-- Gary Kildall (inventor of CP/M, one of the first OS for the micro). | |
Well, if you talk about programming to a group of programmers who use | |
the same language, they can become almost evangelistic about the | |
language. They form a tight-knit community, hold to certain beliefs, and | |
follow certain rules in their programming. It’s like a church with a | |
programming language for a Bible. | |
-- Gary Kildall (inventor of CP/M, one of the first OS for the micro). | |
It’s a problem if the design doesn’t let you add features at a later | |
date. If you have to redo a program, the hours you spend can cause you | |
to lose your competitive edge. A flexible program demonstrates the | |
difference between a good designer and someone who is just getting a | |
piece of code out. | |
-- Gary Kildall (inventor of CP/M, one of the first OS for the micro). | |
[How friendly will this machine be?] Well, I don’t think it’s a matter | |
of friendliness, because ultimately if the program is going to | |
accomplish anything of value, it will probably be relatively complex. | |
-- Gary Kildall (inventor of CP/M, one of the first OS for the micro). | |
Some people suggest that machines would be friendlier if input could be | |
in a natural language. But natural language is probably the worst kind | |
of input because it can be quite ambiguous. The process of retrieving | |
information from the computer would be so time-consuming that you would | |
be better off spending that time getting the information directly from | |
an expert. | |
-- Gary Kildall (inventor of CP/M, one of the first OS for the micro). | |
The only way of discovering the limits of the possible is to venture a | |
little way past them into the impossible. | |
-- Arthur C. Clarke | |
Any sufficiently advanced technology is undistinguishable from magic. | |
-- Arthur C. Clarke | |
That is the inevitable human response. We’re reluctant to believe that | |
great discoveries are in the air. We want to believe that great | |
discoveries are in our heads—and to each party in the multiple the | |
presence of the other party is invariably cause for suspicion. | |
-- Malcolm Gladwell, Who says big ideas are rare? | |
Good ideas are out there for anyone with the wit and the will to find | |
them. | |
-- Malcolm Gladwell, Who says big ideas are rare? | |
A person won't become proficient at something until he or she has done | |
it many times. In other words., if you want someone to be really good at | |
building a software system, he or she will have to have built 10 or more | |
systems of that type. | |
-- Philip Greenspun | |
A person won't retain proficiency at a task unless he or she has at one | |
time learned to perform that task very rapidly. Learning research | |
demonstrates that the skills of people who become accurate but not fast | |
deteriorate much sooner than the skills of people who become both | |
accurate and fast. | |
-- Philip Greenspun | |
Training research shows that if you get speed now you can get quality | |
later. But if you don't get speed you will never get quality in the long | |
run. | |
-- Philip Greenspun | |
Beware of bugs in the above code; I have only proved it correct, not | |
tried it. | |
-- Donald Knuth | |
Wear your best for your execution and stand dignified. Your last | |
recourse against randomness is how you act — if you can’t control | |
outcomes, you can control the elegance of your behaviour. You will | |
always have the last word. | |
-- Nassim Taleb | |
The human brain starts working the moment you are born and never stops | |
until you stand up to speak in public. | |
-- Anonymous | |
The trouble with the world is that the stupid are always cocksure and | |
the intelligent are always filled with doubt. | |
-- Bertrand Russell | |
Simple, clear purpose and principles give rise to complex, intelligent | |
behavior. Complex rules and regulations give rise to simple, stupid | |
behavior. | |
-- Dee Hock, Birth of the Chaordic Age | |
C++ is like teenage sex: Everybody is talking about it all the time, | |
only few are really doing it. | |
-- unknown | |
Functional programming is to algorithms as the ubiquitous little black | |
dress is to women's fashion. | |
-- Mark Tarver (of "The bipolar Lisp programmer" fame) | |
Java and C++ make you think that the new ideas are like the old ones. | |
Java is the most distressing thing to hit computing since MS-DOS. | |
-- Alan Kay | |
For complex systems, the compiler and development environment need to be | |
in the same language that its supporting. It's the only way to grow | |
code. | |
-- Alan Kay | |
Simple things should be simple. Complex things should be possible. | |
-- Alan Kay | |
I invented the term Object-Oriented, and I can tell you I did not have | |
C++ in mind. | |
-- Alan Kay | |
All creativity is an extended form of a joke. | |
-- Alan Kay | |
If you don't fail at least 90 percent of the time, you're not aiming | |
high enough. | |
-- Alan Kay | |
Revolutions come from standing on the shoulders of giants and facing in | |
a better direction. | |
-- Alan Kay | |
Ce n’est que par les beaux sentiments qu’on parvient à la fortune ! | |
-- Charles Baudelaire, Conseils aux jeunes littérateurs. | |
La haine est une liqueur précieuse, un poison plus cher que celui des | |
Borgia, - car il est fait avec notre sang, notre santé, notre sommeil, | |
et les deux tiers de notre amour! Il faut en être avare! | |
-- Charles Baudelaire, Conseils aux jeunes littérateurs. | |
L’art qui satisfait le besoin le plus impérieux sera toujours le plus | |
honoré. | |
-- Charles Baudelaire, Conseils aux jeunes littérateurs. | |
If it looks like a duck, walks like a duck, and quacks like a duck, it's | |
a duck. | |
-- Official definition of "duck typing" | |
In OO, it's the data that is the "important" thing: you define the class | |
which contains member data, and only incidentally contains code for | |
manipulating the object. In FP, it's the code that's important: you | |
define a function which contains code for working with the data, and | |
only incidentally define what the data is. | |
-- almkgor, on reddit | |
It was Edison who said ‘1% inspiration, 99% perspiration’. That may have | |
been true a hundred years ago. These days it's ‘0.01% inspiration, | |
99.99% perspiration’, and the inspiration is the easy part. | |
-- Linux Torvalds | |
The greatest challenge to any thinker is stating the problem in a way | |
that will allow a solution. | |
-- Bertrand Russell | |
No matter how much you plan you’re likely to get half wrong anyway. So | |
don’t do the ‘paralysis through analysis’ thing. That only slows | |
progress and saps morale. | |
-- 37 Signal, Getting real | |
[Innovation] comes from saying no to 1,000 things to make sure we don’t | |
get on the wrong track or try to do too much. We’re always thinking | |
about new markets we could enter, but it’s only by saying no that you | |
can concentrate on the things that are really important. | |
-- Steve Jobs | |
The ability to simplify means to eliminate the unnecessary so that the | |
necessary may speak. | |
-- Hans Hofmann | |
However beautiful the strategy, you should occasionally look at the | |
results. | |
-- Winston Churchill | |
Genius is 1% inspiration and 99% perspiration. | |
-- Thomas Edison | |
I’d rather write programs to write programs than write programs. | |
-- Richard Sites | |
Heureux l'étudiant qui comme la Rivière peut suivre son cours sans | |
quitter son lit... | |
-- Sebastien, sur commentcamarche.net | |
Side projects are less masturbatory than reading RSS, often more | |
useful than MobileMe, more educational than the comments on Reddit, | |
and usually more fun than listening to keynotes. | |
-- Chris Wanstrath | |
:nunmap can also be used outside of a monastery. | |
-- Vim user manual | |
I had to learn how to teach less, so that more could be learned. | |
-- Tim Gallwey, The inner game of work | |
Workers of the world, the chains that bind you are not held in place by | |
a ruling class, a "superior" race, by society, the state, or a leader. | |
They are held in place by none other than yourself. Those who seek to | |
exploit are not themselves free, for they place no value in freedom. Who | |
is it that really employs you and commands you to pick up your daily | |
load? And who is it that you allow to pass judgment on the adequacy of | |
your toil? Who have you empowered to dangle the carrot before you and | |
threaten with disapproval? Who, when you wake each morning, sends you | |
off to what you call your work? | |
Is there an "I want to" behind all your "I have to," or have you been so | |
long forgotten to yourself that "I want" exists only as an idea in your | |
head? If you have disconnected from your soul's desire and are drowning | |
in an ocean of "have to," then rise up and overthrow your master. Begin | |
the journey toward emancipation. Work only in such a way that you are | |
truly self-employed. | |
-- Tim Gallwey, The inner game of work | |
The Work Begins Anew, The Hope Rises Again, And The Dream Lives On. | |
-- Ted Kennedy | |
The hardest part of design ... is keeping features out. | |
-- Donald Norman | |
Before software can be reusable it first has to be usable. | |
-- Ralph Johnson | |
The opposite of love is not hate, it is indifference. | |
-- Elie Wiesel | |
- Gbi de fer | |
- Howa! | |
- On va en France | |
- Non, je vais pas! | |
- Pourquoi? | |
- Parce ki y a pas agouti là-bas! | |
-- Gbi de fer | |
Perpetual optimism is a force multiplier. | |
-- Colin Powell | |
Be the change you want to see in the world. | |
-- Mahatma Gandhi | |
The art of getting someone else to do something you want done because he | |
wants to do it [Leadership]. | |
-- Dwight D. Enseinhover. | |
No one is all evil. Everybody has a good side. If you keep waiting, it | |
will comme up. | |
-- Randy Pausch | |
Experience is what you get when you don't get what you want. | |
-- Cited by Randy Pausch | |
Luck is where preparation meets opportunity. | |
-- Randy Pausch | |
The greatest of all weaknesses is the fear of appearing weak. | |
-- J. B. Bossuet, Politics from Holy Writ, 1709 | |
It's easier to ask forgiveness than it is to get permission. | |
-- Rear Admiral Dr. Grace Hopper | |
An investment in knowledge always pays the best interest. | |
-- Benjamin Franklin | |
Natives who beat drums to drive off evil spirits are objects of scorn to | |
smart Americans who blow horns to break up traffic jams. | |
-- Mary Ellen Kelly | |
A CS professor once explained recursion as follows: | |
A child couldn't sleep, so her mother told her a story about a little frog, | |
who couldn't sleep, so the frog's mother told her a story about a little bear, | |
who couldn't sleep, so the bear's mother told her a story about a little weasel... | |
who fell asleep. | |
...and the little bear fell asleep; | |
...and the little frog fell asleep; | |
...and the child fell asleep. | |
-- everything2.com | |
Never do the impossible. People will expect you to do it forever after. | |
-- pigsandfishes.com | |
Hire people smarter than you. Work with people smarter than you. | |
Listen to them. Let them lead you. Take the blame for all failures, | |
give away the credit for all successes. | |
-- How to fail: 25 secrets learned through failure | |
Give up control. You never really had it anyway. | |
-- How to fail: 25 secrets learned through failure | |
Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity. And I'm not so | |
sure about the former. | |
-- Albert Einstein | |
The important thing is not to stop questioning. | |
-- Albert Einstein | |
Do not accept anything because it comes from the mouth of a respected person. | |
-- Buddha | |
Work as intensely as you play and play as intensely as you work. | |
-- Eric S. Raymond, How To Be A Hacker | |
A witty saying proves nothing | |
-- Voltaire | |
Sound methodology can empower and liberate the creative mind; it cannot inflame | |
or inspire the drudge. | |
-- Frederick P. Brooks, No Sliver Bullet. | |
Il y a très loin de la velléité à la volnt, de la volonté à la résolution, de la | |
résolution au choix des moyens, du choix ds moyens à lapplication. | |
-- Jean-François Paul de Gondi de Retz | |
Do not spoil what you have by desiring what you have not; but remember that what | |
you now have was once among the things only hoped for. | |
-- Greek philosopher Epicurus | |
Nobody can make you feel inferior without your consent. | |
-- Eleanor Roosevelt | |
If you tell the truth, you don't have to remember anything. | |
-- Mark Twain | |
You know you're in love when you can't fall asleep because reality is finally | |
better than your dreams. | |
-- Dr. Seuss | |
The opposite of love is not hate, it's indifference. | |
-- Elie Wiesel | |
Life is what happens to you while you're busy making other plans. | |
-- John Lennon | |
Whenever you find yourself on the side of the majority, it is time to pause and | |
reflect. | |
-- Mark Twain | |
To be yourself in a world that is constantly trying to make you something else | |
is the greatest accomplishment. | |
-- Ralph Waldo Emerson | |
It is not a lack of love, but a lack of friendship that makes unhappy marriages. | |
-- Friedrich Nietzsche | |
In terms of energy, it's better to make a wrong choice than none at all. | |
-- George Leonard, Mastery. | |
Courage is grace under pressure. | |
-- Ernest Hemingway | |
Actually, the essence of boredom is to be found in the obsessive search for | |
novelty. Satisfaction lies in mindful repetition, the discovery of endless | |
richness in subtle variations on familiar themes. | |
-- George Leonard, Mastery. | |
Before enlightenment, chop wood and carry water. | |
After enlightenment, chop wood and carry water. | |
-- Ancient Eastern adage | |
Acknowledging the negative doesn't mean sniveling [whining, complaining]; it | |
means facing the truth and then moving on. | |
-- George Leonard, Mastery. | |
Whatever you can do, or dream you can, begin it. Boldness has genius, power, and | |
magic in it. | |
-- Goethe | |
What we choose to fight is so tiny! | |
What fights us is so great! | |
... | |
When we win it's with small things, | |
and the triumph itself makes us small. | |
... | |
Winning does not tempt that man. | |
This is how he grows: by being defeated, decisively, | |
by constantly greater beings. | |
-- Rainer Maria Rilke, The Man Watching. | |
We fail to realize that mastery is not about perfection. It's about a process, | |
a journey. The master is the one who stays on the path day after day, year after | |
year. The master is the one who is willing to try, and fail, and try again, for | |
as long as he or she lives. | |
-- George Leonard, Mastery. | |
Are you willing to wear your white belt? | |
-- George Leonard, Mastery. |
Thank you for this
thanks so much
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This is amazing!