What's stopping you from coding like this ?

devilish666@lemmy.world to Programmer Humor@programming.dev – 408 points –
75

  1. I am not made out of silly putty.
  2. I am not female.
  3. I cannot code.
  4. I am 120% less flexible than her.
  5. I lack a port hole through which to see the screen.
  6. I don't want to.
1 more...

I'd say visibility is kinda poor

Well, you can stare at a pussy all day. If you don't have a pussy, then never mind.

If I was to ever get myself into that position it's going to take 3 doctors and a voodoo priest to get me out of it.

That wrist angle looks uncomfortable as all hell.

Being generally as flexible as a dry straw, not owning the cool open-toe tights, missing the ability to see through my own abdomen, and I don't use Apple products.

I prefer to type on an ergonomic keyboard thank you very much.

Y'all need to learn how to touch type, which is obviously the single and only issue with the viability of this as a normal practice.

I know how to touch type in Colemak but not Qwerty. Is this a sign of autism?

  1. I can easily bend in half and reach past my toes, but this is another ask entirely.
  2. Even if I could do this, I don't have eyes in my back or a computer screen in my knees.

How to post to c/unixsocks

Lack of a yoga mat or you wouldn't be able to stop me πŸ˜‰

Even as a big fat homo, and presuming I could get into that position, I don't want to stare at my own dick all day.

I could probably get into a similar position, but I'm not that good at touch typing so πŸ€·β€β™‚οΈ

What makes you think this isn’t how I code? Offices love me, this is way cheaper than a bunch of ergonomic equipment.

I can talk out my ass, but can't see through my ass. Common misconception.

Note: (c) Hilaria Baldwin.

You may remember Hilaria from such controversies as "how do you say in English, cu--cucumber?". Born Hillary Lynn Hayward-Thomas in Boston, she somehow developed a Spanish accent once her parents retired to Spain in 2011.

Is this a thing? In MMA, a pro fighter from America called Mackenzie Dern married a Brazilian and adopted both the accent and the need for an English translator. There is also an English football manager called Steve McClaren that managed in the Netherlands, and infamously did an interview in broken English because "he thought locals would understand better".

Mostly it's not a real thing. Most people who speak multiple languages don't get worse at one of them. Europe is full of multilingual people who speak like native speakers in their first language, and then near native in a bunch of other ones. There are times when you can't tell what someone's first language is.

On the other hand, it can happen a bit if you never use your native language, especially in the first few minutes of trying to switch. One famous example of that is Arnold Schwarzenegger who has spent so long in the US speaking English exclusively that his German has a slight American accent (though mostly it's a heavy Styrian Austrian accent). Also, it is true that you can temporarily forget words, even in your native language. It's not so much that you're forgetting the word, just that your brain insists the object is a "pepino" (the Spanish word for cucumber) and for a moment you can't say "ok, yeah, I know it's pepino in Spanish, but what is it in English?"

But, "code switching" is a real thing. If an American moves to Australia, it's really helpful to adopt some Australian pronunciations just to get by. If you ask for a "wah-der" in Australia, they'll have to think for a second, if you ask for a "whoa-tah" they get what you want right away. Someone who speaks English fluently but is always among Brazilians who only speak a bit of English might use a subset of English to talk to them, use local phrasing that isn't proper English but is Portuguese idioms or expressions moved into English word for word, and use Brazilian pronunciations so they're understood more easily, even if those are mispronunciations under most English accents. But, it would be surprising if they couldn't revert to normal English in an English-only setting.

Honestly?

Crappy laptop trackpad picks up stray clicks from my wrists being close enough to trigger touch without touching. Blind operation is not an option, unless I bust the whole experience down to a text-only terminal.

But otherwise, throw in a decent VR headset and I'm on my way to yoga-based development.

That looks like a quality oven appliance. I hate stools, though. 6/10 kitchen