I always like to joke in coding interviews that I really like to make variable names as long as I can so they are very precisely named. Then when I get to a double nested loop I hit them with iterator and jiterator instead of I and j
I always like to joke in coding interviews that I really like to make variable names as long as I can so they are very precisely named. Then when I get to a double nested loop I hit them with iterator and jiterator instead of I and j
The idea is that they can’t work longer than the peasants live, so if they want to stay in power they have to help the peasants get better healthcare
To be fair he’s had the same mindset since the 50’s as well, it was just a progressive mindset that we still haven’t caught up to as a society
Is them some nipple rings in your pockets?
I don’t have any 100% pictures cause I completed it at the same as my wife had our second baby and then started a new job at basically the same time and it was immediately a total mess.
When I’m doing coding interviews I always like to start off and say I’m a big fan of very long variable names. “As descriptive as you can be” I say. Then I get to my first for loop. Instead of i I use “iterator” and then when I start a nested loop I use “jiterator” and it always gets a laugh.
This was while the electrical was still being hooked into the shed. I trenched in two conduits with cat6 Ethernet in one and one 20 amp and one 30 amp in the other. There are a few outlets inside running off the 20 amp circuit, as well as interior and exterior lighting, and a switched exterior weatherproof outlet. The 30 amp powers a single outlet for the space heater, which is entirely overkill for my 1800W space heater.
What a surprising result!