On Tue, 15 Sep 2015, Mouse wrote:
I think the language is less important than what the
code is doing.
I can scribble out hundreds of lines a day when it's boilerplate or
just a mechanical transcription of a well-burnt-in algorithm, but can
easily drop down to the single-digit range when I'm struggling with a
difficult problem. Nor do I have any reason to think I'm unusual in
any respect here.
Exactly! I remember that when I was young and foolish (now I am old and
stupid) I dismissed that kind of number but it is not far wrong, I think
the administative overhead is just as significant as the endless time spent
searching for errors and typos or the time consumed discovering how to do
something new and completely differant.
--
Richard Loken VE6BSV, Unix System Administrator : "Anybody can be a father
Athabasca University : but you have to earn
Athabasca, Alberta Canada : the title of 'daddy'"
** richardlo at admin.athabascau.ca ** : - Lynn Johnston