@inthehands @grimalkina @faassen @jenniferplusplus Its for this reason I don't like the term "best" and prefer "good".
E.g. "Good practices" rather than "Best practices".
@inthehands @grimalkina @faassen @jenniferplusplus Its for this reason I don't like the term "best" and prefer "good".
E.g. "Good practices" rather than "Best practices".
@faassen @inthehands @grimalkina @jenniferplusplus Agree, to me it implies, if taken literally, that there is no room for improvement.
@diazona @faassen @inthehands @grimalkina @jenniferplusplus
I think its the risk of "best" -> dogma that @faassen highlighted that is problematic with using "best".
I've seen many people who don't have an attitude of continual reflection on their (working) practices and just want to get a job done, working by rote and not looking for improvements.
Research Software Engineer at The University of Sheffield.Previous experience in Statistical Genetics, Medical Statistics and Data Science.I try programming in #Python, #R, #Bash and #LISP. Love #Emacs and #Orgmode.
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