What is the best approach when you cannot understand something and you have no one to ask?

The second part of this question is the key. If you are one of the few programmers, and after you knock your head on the keyboard for endless nights, you cannot understand something and no one in your organization asks what you are doing? Not having someone to ask has more to do with the fact that it takes too much time to bring them up to speed to even appreciate them. Are these cases when you have uncomfortable conversations with management and tell them that a third-party contractor with extensive experience will be needed?

+5
source share
7 answers

, , .

1) , - - , , , . Google, SO ..

2) - - , - .

3) - , - , , .

4) , , . , , . , .

5) , , , , : -)

+12

, : http://lists.ethernal.org/oldarchives/cantlug-0211/msg00174.html

. :

1) , , , ,
( )

2) , , .

3) , ,

4) - , , , , . , .

. , , , .

Andy

+4

, , , . . , , .

+1

/ // - , ( ).

. , , , . , , .

+1

google
, , . , , , , .

+1

. , , , ? . AI , . , , , , .

+1

, , .

, Google Q & A , ( Yahoo! Answers ). , , , .

, , . , .

I agree with another answer here that sometimes getting up and moving away from a problem often gives you flashes of insight that will never happen to you while you are at the keyboard. I often had the most brilliant ideas while driving or in the shower.

0
source

All Articles