Flimsy Parkins wrote:Tomsacold wrote:Yeah, that's true, I formed it as a habit early on when I was looking for ways to minimise memory usage in code. The 20,000 byte limit on boards was always really easy to break for me.
I suppose you could argue it's a tidier way of presenting the code, for one thing.
What good is tidy code in a GODLESS UNIVERSE?
That's right, I went there!
well, assuming god doesn't exist, then yes, tidy code as we know it is a largely futile exercise. if god does exist, then he obviously would want us to be happy, or at least for him to be happy. it has been revealed several times that god is a pretty organized guy; he got pissed when adam and eve messed up his cool tree of knowledge, and every church or synagogue i've ever been is a pretty tidy place. so, it can be confirmed that if god exists, he would want tidy code, and if god doesn't exist, then tidy code is a mere creature comfort for our own good, and it doesn't matter either way.
now, there are two ways we can look at the situation: with god, and without god. if we have no way of proving that god is really there short of dying, it would make sense to have tidy code even in a godless universe. if god doesn't exist, we have tidy code to make ourselves happy, and if god does exist, we have tidy code not only to make ourselves happy, but to win favor with god. tidy code, god or not, will ensure us that upon our deaths we are comfortable knowing that if indeed there is a god then we are in his good light, and if there is no god, we at least pleased ourselves.