Skip to main content
added 248 characters in body
Source Link
smci
  • 33.9k
  • 2
  • 28
  • 53

Yes, it wasn't constructive, it certainly wasn't specific, and almost all of us would experience it as extremely rude. Don't let your frustration at assumed laziness by the OP provoke you into a rant. (For a 1-point newbie poster, it was a decent post and showed effort)

  • Your comment contains three "yous", five imperative verbs and at least four insulting phrases. As an exercise, why not rewrite it with zero insults, zero/minimal "yous", and verbs relating to what the code should do, not the person. Why not avoid totally avoid the word "you", or "your code". Say "this code".
  • Keep your comment specific: "You don't understand at a fundamental level how X works and you need to go read a book" is still not constructive.
  • Pinpoint the specific concept OP does not understand, e.g. "This code is not MVC because a) b) c). It needs to do d) e) f). Example g), tutorial h) or book i) should be helpful."
  • Criticize the code, not the person. "This code is bad", not "You don't understand and need to go away and read a book".
  • Just don't throw in phrases like "You don't understand at a fundamental level...". Rewrite, making the specific concept the subject. Not the person. Don't say "Stop being a cargo cult programmer", say "For correct MVC decomposition you must do x) y) z) [or give a link]". Your frustration with the person is spilling over, and your language is amplifying that. I don't think you meant to write everything ad-hominem, but you did. But I think you have good intent. This is another daily reminder that each of us has to self-monitor our frustration at user behavior on SO and not let that spill over into our behavior, check if you are coming across as constructive, else take time off or otherwise be mindful of avoiding burnout.

Yes, it wasn't constructive, it certainly wasn't specific, and almost all of us would experience it as extremely rude. Don't let your frustration at assumed laziness by the OP provoke you into a rant. (For a 1-point newbie poster, it was a decent post and showed effort)

  • Your comment contains three "yous", five imperative verbs and at least four insulting phrases. As an exercise, why not rewrite it with zero insults, zero/minimal "yous", and verbs relating to what the code should do, not the person. Why not avoid totally avoid the word "you", or "your code". Say "this code".
  • Keep your comment specific: "You don't understand at a fundamental level how X works and you need to go read a book" is still not constructive.
  • Pinpoint the specific concept OP does not understand, e.g. "This code is not MVC because a) b) c). It needs to do d) e) f). Example g), tutorial h) or book i) should be helpful."
  • Criticize the code, not the person. "This code is bad", not "You don't understand and need to go away and read a book".
  • Just don't throw in phrases like "You don't understand at a fundamental level...". Rewrite, making the specific concept the subject. Not the person. Don't say "Stop being a cargo cult programmer", say "For correct MVC decomposition you must do x) y) z) [or give a link]". Your frustration with the person is spilling over, and your language is amplifying that. I don't think you meant to write everything ad-hominem, but you did. But I think you have good intent.

Yes, it wasn't constructive, it certainly wasn't specific, and almost all of us would experience it as extremely rude. Don't let your frustration at assumed laziness by the OP provoke you into a rant. (For a 1-point newbie poster, it was a decent post and showed effort)

  • Your comment contains three "yous", five imperative verbs and at least four insulting phrases. As an exercise, why not rewrite it with zero insults, zero/minimal "yous", and verbs relating to what the code should do, not the person. Why not avoid totally avoid the word "you", or "your code". Say "this code".
  • Keep your comment specific: "You don't understand at a fundamental level how X works and you need to go read a book" is still not constructive.
  • Pinpoint the specific concept OP does not understand, e.g. "This code is not MVC because a) b) c). It needs to do d) e) f). Example g), tutorial h) or book i) should be helpful."
  • Criticize the code, not the person. "This code is bad", not "You don't understand and need to go away and read a book".
  • Just don't throw in phrases like "You don't understand at a fundamental level...". Rewrite, making the specific concept the subject. Not the person. Don't say "Stop being a cargo cult programmer", say "For correct MVC decomposition you must do x) y) z) [or give a link]". Your frustration with the person is spilling over, and your language is amplifying that. I don't think you meant to write everything ad-hominem, but you did. But I think you have good intent. This is another daily reminder that each of us has to self-monitor our frustration at user behavior on SO and not let that spill over into our behavior, check if you are coming across as constructive, else take time off or otherwise be mindful of avoiding burnout.
added 16 characters in body
Source Link
smci
  • 33.9k
  • 2
  • 28
  • 53

Yes, it wasn't constructive, it certainly wasn't specific, and mostalmost all of us would experience it as extremely rude. Don't let your frustration at assumed laziness by the OP provoke you into a rant. (For a 1-point newbie poster, it was a decent post and showed effort)

  • Your comment contains three "yous", five imperative verbs and at least four insulting phrases. As an exercise, why not rewrite it with zero "yous" and insults, zero/minimal "yous", and verbs relating to what the code should do, not the person. Why not avoid totally avoid the word "you", or "your code". Say "this code".
  • Keep your comment specific: "You don't understand at a fundamental level how X works and you need to go read a book" is still not constructive.
  • Pinpoint the specific concept OP does not understand, e.g. "This code is not MVC because a) b) c). It needs to do d) e) f). Example g), tutorial h) or book i) should be helpful."
  • Criticize the code, not the person. "This code is bad", not "You don't understand and need to go away and read a book".
  • Just don't throw in phrases like "You don't understand at a fundamental level...". Rewrite, making the specific concept the subject. Not the person. Don't say "Stop being a cargo cult programmer", say "For correct MVC decomposition you must do x) y) z) [or give a link]". Your frustration with the person is spilling over, and your language is amplifying that. I don't think you meant to write everything ad-hominem, but you did. But I think you have good intent.

Yes, it wasn't constructive, it certainly wasn't specific, and most of us would experience it as rude. Don't let your frustration at assumed laziness by the OP provoke you into a rant. (For a 1-point newbie poster, it was a decent post and showed effort)

  • Your comment contains three "yous", five imperative verbs and at least four insulting phrases. As an exercise, why not rewrite it with zero "yous" and insults, and verbs relating to what the code should do, not the person. Why not avoid totally avoid the word "you", or "your code". Say "this code".
  • Keep your comment specific: "You don't understand at a fundamental level how X works and you need to go read a book" is still not constructive.
  • Pinpoint the specific concept OP does not understand, e.g. "This code is not MVC because a) b) c). It needs to do d) e) f). Example g), tutorial h) or book i) should be helpful."
  • Criticize the code, not the person. "This code is bad", not "You don't understand and need to go away and read a book".
  • Just don't throw in phrases like "You don't understand at a fundamental level...". Rewrite, making the specific concept the subject. Not the person. Don't say "Stop being a cargo cult programmer", say "For correct MVC decomposition you must do x) y) z) [or give a link]". Your frustration with the person is spilling over, and your language is amplifying that. I don't think you meant to write everything ad-hominem, but you did. But I think you have good intent.

Yes, it wasn't constructive, it certainly wasn't specific, and almost all of us would experience it as extremely rude. Don't let your frustration at assumed laziness by the OP provoke you into a rant. (For a 1-point newbie poster, it was a decent post and showed effort)

  • Your comment contains three "yous", five imperative verbs and at least four insulting phrases. As an exercise, why not rewrite it with zero insults, zero/minimal "yous", and verbs relating to what the code should do, not the person. Why not avoid totally avoid the word "you", or "your code". Say "this code".
  • Keep your comment specific: "You don't understand at a fundamental level how X works and you need to go read a book" is still not constructive.
  • Pinpoint the specific concept OP does not understand, e.g. "This code is not MVC because a) b) c). It needs to do d) e) f). Example g), tutorial h) or book i) should be helpful."
  • Criticize the code, not the person. "This code is bad", not "You don't understand and need to go away and read a book".
  • Just don't throw in phrases like "You don't understand at a fundamental level...". Rewrite, making the specific concept the subject. Not the person. Don't say "Stop being a cargo cult programmer", say "For correct MVC decomposition you must do x) y) z) [or give a link]". Your frustration with the person is spilling over, and your language is amplifying that. I don't think you meant to write everything ad-hominem, but you did. But I think you have good intent.
removed an extra 's'
Source Link

Yes, it wasn't constructive, it certainly wasn't specific, and most of us would experience it as rude. Don't let your frustration at asssumedassumed laziness by the OP provoke you into a rant. (For a 1-point newbie poster, it was a decent post and showed effort)

  • Your comment contains three "yous", five imperative verbs and at least four insulting phrases. As an exercise, why not rewrite it with zero "yous" and insults, and verbs relating to what the code should do, not the person. Why not avoid totally avoid the word "you", or "your code". Say "this code".
  • Keep your comment specific: "You don't understand at a fundamental level how X works and you need to go read a book" is still not constructive.
  • Pinpoint the specific concept OP does not understand, e.g. "This code is not MVC because a) b) c). It needs to do d) e) f). Example g), tutorial h) or book i) should be helpful."
  • Criticize the code, not the person. "This code is bad", not "You don't understand and need to go away and read a book".
  • Just don't throw in phrases like "You don't understand at a fundamental level...". Rewrite, making the specific concept the subject. Not the person. Don't say "Stop being a cargo cult programmer", say "For correct MVC decomposition you must do x) y) z) [or give a link]". Your frustration with the person is spilling over, and your language is amplifying that. I don't think you meant to write everything ad-hominem, but you did. But I think you have good intent.

Yes, it wasn't constructive, it certainly wasn't specific, and most of us would experience it as rude. Don't let your frustration at asssumed laziness by the OP provoke you into a rant. (For a 1-point newbie poster, it was a decent post and showed effort)

  • Your comment contains three "yous", five imperative verbs and at least four insulting phrases. As an exercise, why not rewrite it with zero "yous" and insults, and verbs relating to what the code should do, not the person. Why not avoid totally avoid the word "you", or "your code". Say "this code".
  • Keep your comment specific: "You don't understand at a fundamental level how X works and you need to go read a book" is still not constructive.
  • Pinpoint the specific concept OP does not understand, e.g. "This code is not MVC because a) b) c). It needs to do d) e) f). Example g), tutorial h) or book i) should be helpful."
  • Criticize the code, not the person. "This code is bad", not "You don't understand and need to go away and read a book".
  • Just don't throw in phrases like "You don't understand at a fundamental level...". Rewrite, making the specific concept the subject. Not the person. Don't say "Stop being a cargo cult programmer", say "For correct MVC decomposition you must do x) y) z) [or give a link]". Your frustration with the person is spilling over, and your language is amplifying that. I don't think you meant to write everything ad-hominem, but you did. But I think you have good intent.

Yes, it wasn't constructive, it certainly wasn't specific, and most of us would experience it as rude. Don't let your frustration at assumed laziness by the OP provoke you into a rant. (For a 1-point newbie poster, it was a decent post and showed effort)

  • Your comment contains three "yous", five imperative verbs and at least four insulting phrases. As an exercise, why not rewrite it with zero "yous" and insults, and verbs relating to what the code should do, not the person. Why not avoid totally avoid the word "you", or "your code". Say "this code".
  • Keep your comment specific: "You don't understand at a fundamental level how X works and you need to go read a book" is still not constructive.
  • Pinpoint the specific concept OP does not understand, e.g. "This code is not MVC because a) b) c). It needs to do d) e) f). Example g), tutorial h) or book i) should be helpful."
  • Criticize the code, not the person. "This code is bad", not "You don't understand and need to go away and read a book".
  • Just don't throw in phrases like "You don't understand at a fundamental level...". Rewrite, making the specific concept the subject. Not the person. Don't say "Stop being a cargo cult programmer", say "For correct MVC decomposition you must do x) y) z) [or give a link]". Your frustration with the person is spilling over, and your language is amplifying that. I don't think you meant to write everything ad-hominem, but you did. But I think you have good intent.
Source Link
smci
  • 33.9k
  • 2
  • 28
  • 53
Loading