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> Viewing Profile:thepeoplescoder
thepeoplescoder

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Member Group: Contributors
Joined: 2 Feb, 2009

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Total Cumulative Posts 97
( 0.3 posts per day / 0.01% of total forum posts )
Most active in C and C++
( 29 posts / 30% of this member's active posts )
Last Active Yesterday, 12:44 PM
Status User is offline (Offline)
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ICQ 10166297
MSN thepeoplescoder@live.com
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Home Page http://127.0.0.1/
Birthday 12 June 1982
Location Los Angeles, CA
Interests Coding, cooking, writing poetry, calling people out on their B.S., cracking jokes, women with curves/awesome personalities/pretty smiles/etc., watching what makes a person tick, intelligent people, playing MapleStory, looking around online for more programming related stuff, electronics and circuit analysis, mathematics, etc. I'm pretty much into anything, I'd like to think that I have an open mind, and I'm willing to try anything (within reason) at least once.

When it comes to helping others with coding, I love to try to help people out, but please, if you're not specific with what you want, or if you don't put forth an effort to hone in on the details of what you wish to be helped with, don't expect me to read your mind; I will act as if you said nothing.

While I am on the subject of helping out, one thing that bothers me most is when there are people who are new to programming, who are trying to grasp a concept, and then others try to "help" by showing multiple ways of doing something, or by introducing to them a topic that they're not ready for. To those people, I say stop. You're not helping. If anything, you're scaring people away from our craft. As a Computer Science tutor, who knows what it's like trying to convey programming concepts to new programmers and would-be engineers with no previous experience, I feel that this needed to be said.
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Full Name
Years Programming13
Programming LanguagesQBasic, C, C++, C#, Python, Ruby, Java, FORTRAN, Assembly (x86), Euphoria, Pascal, and currently teaching myself VB.NET (for as long as time allows)
LinkedIn
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CountryUS
OS PreferenceWindows
Favorite BrowserFireFox
Favorite ProcessorIntel
Favorite Gaming PlatformPC
Your CarWho Cares
Xfire
Skype
Thanks13
Dream Kudos25
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Nicknamethepeoplescoder

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Austin C. - thepeoplescoder

My FIVE Rules for Programming
1. Assume nothing.
2. You are always in control.
3. Don't EVER over think anything, ever.
4. Be as lazy as possible. (Because laziness = efficiency!)
5. INDENT YOUR CODE PROPERLY!

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Time is now: 11/21/09 10:01PM

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