On Jan 23, 1:30 pm, Paddy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > I've heard quality expressed as "meeting requirements", which I think > is apt. Falling short of requirements everyone knows doesn't give a > quality result, but equally 'exceeding' requirements also detracts > from quality (as does not knowing your requirements). > It is good to learn optimization techniques, which may be part of what > you are saying, but part of that is learning when it pays to apply > them and/or search for them; and when it does not.
The OP wanted an answer to a simple question, not a lecture on good software engineering principles. This whole subthread reminds of a movie (can't remember which) where someone asks his buddy in the stadium "what do you want?". His buddy gets it wrong and embarks in a long diatribe of what he wants in life now, what he wanted as a child, what's the meaning of one's life and so on. After a couple of minutes the guy cuts him and asks again: - "Man, what do you want, burger or hot dog?" - "Oh, a hot dog". Sometimes you want to see the tree right in front of you, not the whole damn forest. George -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list