On Feb 14, 6:06 pm, alex23 <wuwe...@gmail.com> wrote: > On Feb 15, 9:47 am, James Mills <prolo...@shortcircuit.net.au> wrote: > > > On Tue, Feb 15, 2011 at 9:32 AM, rantingrick <rantingr...@gmail.com> wrote: ... [snip: eloquent speech!] ... > > I actually agree with this. :) > The problem is that it's not a philosophy which the ranting one > practices,
Actually I could argue quite *successfully* that i have been designing the rebirth (and fostering the forward thinking evolution!) of the entire Python community and some very important aspects of the language for the last couple of years. I have risen through the ranks from a mere scribe to a truly Pythonic visionary. However, some of my fellow "engineers" refuse to move from the design phase into the production phase due to "silly squabbling" and "petty posturing". We can do many great things if we can put our egos aside and join together in a common goal. [Anecdote] I always find it interesting how once a person joins an online group as a "helper" they cannot ask questions anymore. It's like an unwritten law you dare not break because if you do your "peers" will see you as weak and they will pounce on you, discredit you, and then excommunicate you! Any sign of weakness and your out. However if you show force and brow beat those who dare challenge you then fear will elevate you through the ranks. This should not be the case. No one person knows everything. Not even the great Guido van Rossum himself could have engineered something like Python alone. Sure, Python is *his* brainchild (and a very beautiful one!) however, he would have made many mistakes and/or left out many good designs if he did not have the help of a strong community. [Back on track] I would like to see this group drop the egos and start really working together. Stop being afraid of how you appear to others and be yourself. Some folks will be good in one area and other folks in another. Only together can we conquer all problem domains. In the end i promise they will respect you more for your honesty. And it will not be a respect forged from fear, no, it will be something greater! A respect forged from collaboration. A respect of comrades in arms. This is the future i bring to c.l.py! -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list