On Tuesday, October 28, 2014 12:19:29 PM UTC-4, Marcus Blankenship wrote:
>
> Agreed.  I've been amazed at how kind this group has been, despite your 
> attitude of disrespect toward them.  
>
> On Tue, Oct 28, 2014 at 9:09 AM, Dylan Butman <dbu...@gmail.com 
> <javascript:>> wrote:
>
>> From your attitude and lack of respect for the very knowledgeable, 
>> experienced, and respectful people here trying to help improve and 
>> understand the short comings in your current workflow, I'd say you might be 
>> walking to work in the near future. Parking's free that way. 
>>
>
Really? Because I'm not the one who accused someone of nonexistent 
"shortcomings" and then made the impotent threat to revoke someone's 
driver's license -- and then had his threatening post deleted by the 
moderator. Hmm. :)

Meanwhile, I think some people still have not grasped the scale of what I'm 
doing, namely how small it is. Small, experimental, limited to one person, 
and so forth. Version control, I repeat, would be MASSIVE overkill under 
the circumstances. It would make barely any less sense to reach for version 
control before writing a "hello, world" program.

IF the project grows enough and is successful enough, then I might consider 
creating a github account and basing it there. But right now things are 
NOWHERE NEAR that kind of state. I am unsure how else to try to communicate 
the fact of how small, unpublishable, and etc. it is at this stage, so I 
will probably give up on anyone here who still seems to think it's big 
enough, has enough developers, or whatever to benefit from version control. 
It's not. So far there's two files of combined size 1200 lines, most of 
them comment and docstring lines. There might be as many as 200 actual 
lines of Clojure in there so far. Using a version control system, and 
dealing with all of the associated ceremony and formalities, would be like 
renting a factory and setting up all of the process monitoring, conveyor 
belt equipment, robot arms, safety inspections, permits, and everything 
else attendant the use of such a facility, just to put together a high 
school shop project wooden birdhouse to hang from a tree in my own back 
yard. :) It would be like filing a flight plan with the FAA before going to 
the city park with a kite. Like getting in the car and driving to the house 
next door to visit the neighbors for coffee. Like bringing a map, compass, 
pack full of survival supplies, camp stove, satellite phone, avalanche 
beacon, ropes, pitons, and sturdy hiking boots to take a walk in NYC that 
crosses through Central Park. Like commissioning the Glomar Explorer to 
fish a ring out of a toilet bowl. Bringing lawyers and pages of CYA 
contract text to a negotiation with a Starbucks for the purchase of a 
latte. Taking out a business license and city zoning permit to open a kid's 
five-cent lemonade stand. Seeking an import license before bringing a 
couple of Disney T-shirts back from EuroDisney. Requiring a full credit 
check before loaning your neighbor a screwdriver. Using steel-reinforced 
concrete to build a sandcastle.

I trust everyone now gets the picture, and that any exception is named 
Sheldon Cooper? :)


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