Sinnloses Stöckchen, Level 16
NetzkulturÜber eine lange, verworrene Bloggerkette bin ich über Markus auch ein Teil des sinnlosen Stöckchen geworden. Die Aufgabe:
- Nimm das nächste Buch in deiner Nähe mit mindestens 123 Seiten.
- Schlage Seite 123 auf.
- Suche den fünften Satz auf der Seite.
- Poste die nächste drei Sätze.
Das nächste
Buch ist bei mir gerade Generative Programming von Czarnecki und Eisenecker:
It also states that important issues should be represented in programs intentionally (i.e., explicitly, declaratively, and with little or no
extra noise) and should be well localized. This facilitates unserstandability, adaptability, reusability, and the many other good qualities of a program because intentionality and localisation allow us to easily verify how a program implements out requirements. Unfortunately, the relevant issues are usually mutually dependent and overlapping because they all concern one common model (i.e., out program being constructed). Thus, if we try to represent all these issues explicitly and locally, we will introduce a lot of redundancies.
An meinem Nachttisch liegt gerade Getting Things Done vom Großmeister David Allen. Auf Seite 123 steht:
You may find you have a tendency, while processing your inbasket, to pick something up, not know exactly what you want zo do about it, and then let your eyes wander into another item fatther down the stack and get engaged with it. That item may be more attractive to your psyche because you know right away what to do with it - and you don
t feel like thinking about whats in you hand. This is dangerous terretory.
Und ganz im Sinne von Dont Break the chain reiche ich das Stöcklein weiter an Andreas, Florian, Rubn und kb.