I don't know what holds me back from doing it most of the time, maybe physical laziness, but I tend to solve most of my programming problems by putting the damn problem on paper first.

The FSM attempt in my assignment was a real confusing mess that froze my mind, until I turned to pen and paper to sort it out.

@freemo @Rovine

That's perfectly fine -- planning should start on paper and pencil, or a large white board or blackboard.

Things get too complex to hold in one's conscient mind. Making notes and spreading things around on the table sure helps; you can focus on a smaller piece and deal with it, then move back and look at the picture, what should come next?

Too big to chew? Take it one Byte at a time. 😉 🍷

@design_RG @freemo Mate I would love having whiteboard walls for my room. My uni's software development lab is not filled with computers, but cubicle dividers made out of whiteboards.

But I'm on a working holiday and not staying at any one place for long, so my A4 pad will have to do.

@Rovine
LOL, there, we both see their point. 😄

I remember visiting a local older school, and to fall in love with their ancient, beautiful, smooth slate backboards.

Being a math teacher at the time, that was to salivate for. 😉
@freemo

@design_RG

If your into math check out the math section specifically of my blog. There is some fun stuff there IMO.

I particularly enjoyed playing with and explaining the Verhurst equation. Tweaked it a little at the end to model advertising that I used in a commercial application once.

@Rovine

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