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The day I apparently taught someone about arrays

Looking back, I'm not sure why I even answeredanswered the questionthe question. Maybe it was because I remembered being a beginner developer and wanted to help someone else who was obviously just starting. Normally, I would cringe at the use of eval just to pick which side of a die to show, but for some reason I looked past the syntax errors and use of eval decided to help this JavaScript beginner.

I started by suggesting using an array, offering code that resembled the existing code, but after a comment about a 100-sided die, I realized that this wouldn't scale. I decided to help the OP make the leap into a for loop. I even gave a JSFiddle example of a 100-sided die. The user apparently understood my code and was then even able to implement my suggestions without needing me to write the code.

The user has gone on and asked many more questions, and seems to have gotten many helpful answers, but the one I was able to answer was his least popular question, and I was still able to help him, which is the whole reason why I answer questions on Stack Overflow*.

* Possibly other than working to increase a nearly worthless number beside my name

The day I apparently taught someone about arrays

Looking back, I'm not sure why I even answered the question. Maybe it was because I remembered being a beginner developer and wanted to help someone else who was obviously just starting. Normally, I would cringe at the use of eval just to pick which side of a die to show, but for some reason I looked past the syntax errors and use of eval decided to help this JavaScript beginner.

I started by suggesting using an array, offering code that resembled the existing code, but after a comment about a 100-sided die, I realized that this wouldn't scale. I decided to help the OP make the leap into a for loop. I even gave a JSFiddle example of a 100-sided die. The user apparently understood my code and was then even able to implement my suggestions without needing me to write the code.

The user has gone on and asked many more questions, and seems to have gotten many helpful answers, but the one I was able to answer was his least popular question, and I was still able to help him, which is the whole reason why I answer questions on Stack Overflow*.

* Possibly other than working to increase a nearly worthless number beside my name

The day I apparently taught someone about arrays

Looking back, I'm not sure why I even answered the question. Maybe it was because I remembered being a beginner developer and wanted to help someone else who was obviously just starting. Normally, I would cringe at the use of eval just to pick which side of a die to show, but for some reason I looked past the syntax errors and use of eval decided to help this JavaScript beginner.

I started by suggesting using an array, offering code that resembled the existing code, but after a comment about a 100-sided die, I realized that this wouldn't scale. I decided to help the OP make the leap into a for loop. I even gave a JSFiddle example of a 100-sided die. The user apparently understood my code and was then even able to implement my suggestions without needing me to write the code.

The user has gone on and asked many more questions, and seems to have gotten many helpful answers, but the one I was able to answer was his least popular question, and I was still able to help him, which is the whole reason why I answer questions on Stack Overflow*.

* Possibly other than working to increase a nearly worthless number beside my name

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Joshua Dwire
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The day I apparently taught someone about arrays

Looking back, I'm not sure why I even answered the question. Maybe it was because I remembered being a beginner developer and wanted to help someone else who was obviously just starting. Normally, I would cringe at the use of eval just to pick which side of a die to show, but for some reason I looked past the syntax errors and use of eval decided to help this JavaScript beginner.

I started by suggesting using an array, offering code that resembled the existing code, but after a comment about a 100-sided die, I realized that this wouldn't scale. I decided to help the OP make the leap into a for loop. I even gave a JSFiddle example of a 100-sided die. The user apparently understood my code and was then even able to implement my suggestions without needing me to write the code.

The user has gone on and asked many more questions, and seems to have gotten many helpful answers, but the one I was able to answer was his least popular question, and I was still able to help him, which is the whole reason why I answer questions on Stack Overflow*.

* Possibly other than working to increase a nearly worthless number beside my name