this post was submitted on 14 Mar 2024
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Programming
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I've got two tips to add to the pile you've already read.
I recommend you read the manuals related to what you are using. Have you read the python manual? And the ones for the libraries you use? If you do you'll definitely find something very useful that you didn't know about.
That and, reread your code. Over and over until it makes total sense, and only run it then. It might seem slow, and it'll require patience at first. Running and testing it will always be slower and is generally only useful when testing out the concept you had in mind. But as long as you're doing your conceptual work right, this shouldn't happen often. And so, most work will be spent trying to track down bugs in the implementation of the concept in the code. Trust me when you read your code rigorously you'll immediately find issues. In some cases use temporary prints. Oh and avoid the debugger.