Getting things to work ====================== Standards may differ, but in the computing world, the difference between something working and just refusing to cooperate is quite stark, binary one may even say. This small article/rant will go over some random issues I encountered, I feel there isn't enough of this in the internet and often enough when one fails to get a computer to do what one wants, one might feel quite inadequate, and at times even wonder if we are a farse (good old impostor syndrom attacks again) only to find a solution later that gets the system to work just fine without any fanfare whatsoever, which after what can at times be hours of work, feels quite anticlimatic. One of the most infuriating parts of this is the issues one can face feel so trivial yet challenging at the same time, for example getting a simple to dynamically change when preparing a file to get uploaded whilst it can be done in about half a line of python code, getting it done without hardcoding the replace can get to be harder, and the final result of one's labour is as unnoticeable as it is hard to get right. Getting things right takes time, effort and is hard to tell how much effort went into it once the whole ordeal is complete, a journey one must take that few outside the team and sometimes even within, will fail to notice. Nobody wants broken software, yet broken software is the norm. We've all had that bug one spent hours hunting down, using advanced debuggers, even the mighty `printf("got here")` that defeats many nasty critters that dwell in our code, spent ages looking at memory values moving around, only to find the cause of this ordeal was a greater-than symbol where a smaller-than should have taken it's place, or an `x = nil` at the start of a loop we forgot to add. Many bugs look like this, they do take quite a bit of time, and once fixed nobody will ever care about this trivial issue once deployed. But I refuse to let this still be the case! Found you where moving a pointer in the wrong direction? Great! Found out you where assigning instead of comparing? Amazing! (yes this is a thing in C, it pains me to explain that `if (x = 2)` is a valid expression, seriously use your linters, they will save you the pain) So if you're ever stuck with a situation you can't get working, be it getting a library to compile, a service to run, or an algorithm to do what it should do, don't get discouraged, it happens to all of us, nobody is perfect (except our Lord and Saviour, Florida Man, bless him.) Keep working on your project, you'll get it right eventually, and be proud once you get there, proud of not giving up. Many projects die when their developer hits a wall they can't get over, don't let that happen to yours, whatever it is, whatever it does. Don't give up. -K