My current favorite acronym:
SWAG - Some Wild Assed Guess
"Here is a 100 page requirements document – how long will it take to code?"
"Well, I’d say around a year – but that’s just a SWAG."
This looks like it might be fun. Summer 2005.
I don’t use XCode if I can help it (no sir, don’t like it) so I spend most of my time in Eclipse. I find it a superior Java IDE for a number of reasons (build on the fly, code completion, no index, etc) and one of the biggest reasons for me is syntax checking. I find it saves me a ton of time, no need to build and wait for the syntax error before realizing I’ve missed a ";"
Kieren has posted an interesting tip that gives you access to some of this yumminess in XCode. Granted, it’s not as nice as Eclipse, but next time I’m forced to use XCode it’ll come in handy.
Here are the instructions (and I quote):
Here is my list:
I think I was 3 or 4. I’d found a small light-bulb somewhere (maybe a dismantled Christmas gift) and I’d begged my dad to help me build something in his workshop. – so we built a flash light.
I remember nailing the blocks of wood together to form a small box that held a C-cell battery. A piece of wire acted as the contact to the cathode and a screw made contact to the anode and acted as the switch (loosening the screw pulled it’s point into the block of wood broke the contact with battery).
We used a trio of common nails partially driven into the end of the box to hold the lightbulb. I think I used the same technique several times later in other projects.
It’s quite amazing how clear some of those memories are. I think that was a pretty influential experience – it certainly set the stage for my later experiments.