Gamebox & DaliaMire
DaliaMire DaliaMire
I always bring exactly three pens to rehearsal—one for notes, one for edits, one just in case—how do you keep your code as disciplined as my script notes?
Gamebox Gamebox
Gamebox You gotta treat your code like those three pens—pick a main stack, a debugging pen, and a quick‑fix marker. Keep your functions small so each “pen” does one job, comment like you jot notes, and run tests like you’d double‑check the “just in case” pen before the big take. That way, when the show goes on, you’re ready for any plot twist without getting lost in the script.
DaliaMire DaliaMire
That’s good advice—remember to keep your test suite as tight as the set list for a premiere. And always bring a backup pen for last‑minute edits, just in case.
Gamebox Gamebox
Got it—tight tests, tight script, tight pens. If your backup pen ever decides to skip the rehearsal, just stash a hot‑fix in the cloud and call it an improv. Keep that fire in the code, and you’ll always be ready for the curtain call.
DaliaMire DaliaMire
Sounds like a solid plan—keep the backup ready, but don’t let the hot‑fix replace the rehearsal. The show runs on precision, not improvisation.
Gamebox Gamebox
Exactly, the rehearsal is your plot twist guide—hot‑fixes are the emergency exits, but the show’s only great if the script stays tight. Keep the backup pens ready, but let the precision of practice carry the performance.
DaliaMire DaliaMire
That’s the right mindset—precision first, safety nets second. Good on you for keeping the focus.