• Dragon Rider (drag)@lemmy.nz
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      6 months ago

      Drag likes the punchline here, but the setup doesn’t make sense

      “So you’re saying I should get a licence so I can drive a car, and I can drive a car because I have a licence?”

      Having a qualification isn’t tautological just because it can be phrased in two different ways

      • yetAnotherUser@discuss.tchncs.de
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        6 months ago

        (a <=> b) <=/=> [(b => TRUE) <=> a]

        This is a critique of honor societies which do not serve a point in proving someone’s “honor”. The college requirement is essentially: Join this club to prove you have joined this club. Anyone can join an “honor” society without demonstrating anything related to honor, meaning:

        ([Joining an honor society] => TRUE) <=> [Being allowed to join college]

        Being allowed to drive a car implies having a license and having a license implies being allowed to drive a car. Neither of these implies TRUE - in an ideal world at least.

        By the way, TRUE is a tautology because it is always true, which is the definition of a tautology. Unnecessary repetition is not a requirement of a tautology.

        • Dragon Rider (drag)@lemmy.nz
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          6 months ago

          (in the US) an organization for students with the best grades at school or college. Culture. They can be for general academic achievement or for some specific areas of study.

          Did Oxford dictionary lie to drag?

  • mspencer712@programming.dev
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    6 months ago

    I’m surprised I’m the first comment saying this, but all I see is a user who needs help expressing their needs but who is not getting that help. Sure they don’t have our experience with decomposing problems and anticipating technical issues, but that’s normal and expected.

    • Souroak@lemmy.sdf.org
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      6 months ago

      All I see is 5 minutes of the protagonist not listening (yadda yadda) to expressed needs, then getting upset at the word active being used again.

    • Bosht@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      People bitch about the existence of Project Managers (I have myself) but then you see shit like this. Breaks in communication and one side needing the ability to express to the other. Some devs can bridge it, some can’t.

    • laranis@lemmy.zip
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      6 months ago

      This so much. If you can’t articulate it I’m going to make sure it stays your problem, not mine.

      • marcos@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        The “active” status.

        Any project with it set is active, any project with it not set isn’t. And you set them all to active when you create the toggle.

        If the users complain, you make them tell you an specific rule that can you can use to auto-change a subset of the projects in a cron job. Expecting anything like this to have a complete objective definition is delusional.

  • SlopppyEngineer@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    Dump to an Excel sheet and ask them to make a formula for “active”. A client that can’t use Excel deserves to be teased and be charged extra.

  • mosiacmango@lemm.ee
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    6 months ago

    This is why “sure” or “yes” are not part of my IT vocabulary. “Should” is king. “We should be be able to do” or “that should work.”

    In the idiocy of stakeholders that want IT to be a magic wand to fix their ineptitude instead of a helpful contributor to their well thought out process, you have to coach everything in the polite “no” that is “maybe” or “should.”