Can I ask Kaiji-san a question, since you're froma different generation?
When you use keyword like panic, do you feel nervous? Or just treat it like any other keyword like forEach or if?
Does the university have a counsellor? If so, Ren-san should consider going to them.
I have a programming related confession to make...
When I first learnt C++, in programs like dynamic linked list, I was cautioned about "orphaned" memory when using pointers.
The term stuck in my mind that whenever I wrote in C/C++, I would always manually check each line of pointer code before running it for the first time. Of course, I made errors but I was always anxious that even if the output is not as expected, that I shouldn't create orphaned memory.
In Java, I didn't care as much and felt more free, because atleast for whatever I was writing Garbage collector will handle that. Maybe I wasn't a good programmer due to this nervousness caused by calling it "orphaned" memory -- words are powerful.
I remembered this when Kaiji-san was talking about panic
(Why call something panic? Even hearing it makes me uncomfortable 😔)
Oh.. it's from Segmentation fault 😅 nostalgic!
This makes me feel so old...
I am an aunty but not that old an aunty 🙈
Thank you - I understand better now 🙏🙏
But with co-pilot and chatGPT, I suppose it will matter slightly less. The art of reading code to understand may be siphoned off to bots 😅
I understand the point about choosing the shortest name that clearly conveys the meaning of variable but scope seems irrelevant to me. Whether it's used in a single function or a class or a library, the name has to be clear no?
And using i & j as examples is cheating -- everyone who learns programming, knows i & j the loop variable context. Without that learnt context index will be a better choice.
With editors, it's not like you need to type the variable name fully. (look at me, someone who's not coded a long time debating with Mattn-san 🤦♀️)
That's a bit sad -- when will kids make ☃️??
Here, if it rains heavily, schools are closed ,because many kids either walk to school or are dropped on motorbikes and it's risky during heavy rain.
That seems like an odd choice for variable names...🤔
Denryu's English name is Ampharos.
In English forums, people were discussing how Pharos means lighthouse in Greek and how lighthouse plays into the storyline. As per them, it's meant to be a sheep without its wool + some dragon elements like the light on its forehead
Oh.. I just saw
しょぱん & ショパン and thought it was trying a pun 😂😂
Not that I would understand Japanese pun anyways 🙈

