On 12/07/2013 12:18, a.gra...@gmail.com wrote: > If I'm in a team where other people are way more expert than me, I > will never want to take the keyboard and start coding something. > I think they would be bored by my slowness and by my level. My slow > speed in coding could affect also the whole result (considering also > that we have a stric time to respect)
Hmmm. Perhaps there's a perception issue here. Speaking for myself, but -- I believe -- channelling the other organisers, I would say that we're far more interested in people having a go than in what the team's finished product is like. Again: a lot depends on who's in your team. Certainly I have no problem with watching someone code slowly and trying to get a hold of what's going on, maybe learning a bit. Likewise I have no problem with someone choosing to observe rather than code in the hope of seeing how other (perhaps more experienced) people do things. I would guess that, for any given Dojo, at least one and sometimes two teams don't actually produce a finished product, but it's always fun to see where they've gone and what they tried and what doesn't work. (And there's always the excitement of a live debugging session when they suddenly spot the issue and try to fix it in situ). > Another person could simply say: mmm... interesting but... not for my > level. And stop coming. Do you really want this? When all's said and done, if someone doesn't think it's for them, then it's not for them. We can try to be as accommodating as possible, but you can't please all the people all the time. TJG _______________________________________________ python-uk mailing list python-uk@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-uk