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Full Discussion: Naive coding...
The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Naive coding... Post 302991920 by wisecracker on Saturday 18th of February 2017 10:47:17 AM
Old 02-18-2017
Naive coding...

"Naive coding."
(Apologies for any typos.)

I came across this phrase a couple of weeks ago and it has made me decide to set off a discussion.

I had never heard of it before but I did some research and discovered that I probably fall into this category.

My phrase is: "I code to work, not work to code!", so therefore I guess when viewing any of my code, pros' must think how primitive some of it looks.

So, what do you guys who code for a living think when you see some attempts of others solving problems and use _brute_force_methods_ for example to solve their coding problems when there are probably more elegant solutions?

Also what is wrong with a naive solution that works for the coder although it may not be anywhere near as fast as another method more obvious to someone else?

The plotting and drawing routines for example on AudioScope can't seem to be done any other way except by _brute_force_...

Comments......
 

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Frontier::RPC2(3)					User Contributed Perl Documentation					 Frontier::RPC2(3)

NAME
Frontier::RPC2 - encode/decode RPC2 format XML SYNOPSIS
use Frontier::RPC2; $coder = Frontier::RPC2->new; $xml_string = $coder->encode_call($method, @args); $xml_string = $coder->encode_response($result); $xml_string = $coder->encode_fault($code, $message); $call = $coder->decode($xml_string); $response_xml = $coder->serve($request_xml, $methods); $boolean_object = $coder->boolean($boolean); $date_time_object = $coder->date_time($date_time); $base64_object = $coder->base64($base64); $int_object = $coder->int(42); $float_object = $coder->float(3.14159); $string_object = $coder->string("Foo"); DESCRIPTION
Frontier::RPC2 encodes and decodes XML RPC calls. $coder = Frontier::RPC2->new( OPTIONS ) Create a new encoder/decoder. The following option is supported: encoding The XML encoding to be specified in the XML declaration of encoded RPC requests or responses. Decoded results may have a different encoding specified; XML::Parser will convert decoded data to UTF-8. The default encoding is none, which uses XML 1.0's default of UTF-8. For example: $server = Frontier::RPC2->new( 'encoding' => 'ISO-8859-1' ); use_objects If set to a non-zero value will convert incoming <i4>, <float>, and <string> values to objects instead of scalars. See int(), float(), and string() below for more details. $xml_string = $coder->encode_call($method, @args) `"encode_call"' converts a method name and it's arguments into an RPC2 `"methodCall"' element, returning the XML fragment. $xml_string = $coder->encode_response($result) `"encode_response"' converts the return value of a procedure into an RPC2 `"methodResponse"' element containing the result, returning the XML fragment. $xml_string = $coder->encode_fault($code, $message) `"encode_fault"' converts a fault code and message into an RPC2 `"methodResponse"' element containing a `"fault"' element, returning the XML fragment. $call = $coder->decode($xml_string) `"decode"' converts an XML string containing an RPC2 `"methodCall"' or `"methodResponse"' element into a hash containing three members, `"type"', `"value"', and `"method_name"'. `"type"' is one of `"call"', `"response"', or `"fault"'. `"value"' is array containing the parameters or result of the RPC. For a `"call"' type, `"value"' contains call's parameters and `"method_name"' contains the method being called. For a `"response"' type, the `"value"' array contains call's result. For a `"fault"' type, the `"value"' array contains a hash with the two members `"faultCode"' and `"faultMessage"'. $response_xml = $coder->serve($request_xml, $methods) `"serve"' decodes `$request_xml', looks up the called method name in the `$methods' hash and calls it, and then encodes and returns the response as XML. $boolean_object = $coder->boolean($boolean); $date_time_object = $coder->date_time($date_time); $base64_object = $coder->base64($base64); These methods create and return XML-RPC-specific datatypes that can be passed to the encoder. The decoder may also return these datatypes. The corresponding package names (for use with `"ref()"', for example) are `"Frontier::RPC2::Boolean"', `"Fron- tier::RPC2::DateTime::ISO8601"', and `"Frontier::RPC2::Base64"'. You can change and retrieve the value of boolean, date/time, and base64 data using the `"value"' method of those objects, i.e.: $boolean = $boolean_object->value; $boolean_object->value(1); $int_object = $coder->int(42); $float_object = $coder->float(3.14159); $string_object = $coder->string("Foo"); By default, you may pass ordinary Perl values (scalars) to be encoded. RPC2 automatically converts them to XML-RPC types if they look like an integer, float, or as a string. This assumption causes problems when you want to pass a string that looks like "0096", RPC2 will convert that to an <i4> because it looks like an integer. With these methods, you could now create a string object like this: $part_num = $coder->string("0096"); and be confident that it will be passed as an XML-RPC string. You can change and retrieve values from objects using value() as described above. SEE ALSO
perl(1), Frontier::Daemon(3), Frontier::Client(3) <http://www.scripting.com/frontier5/xml/code/rpc.html> AUTHOR
Ken MacLeod <ken@bitsko.slc.ut.us> perl v5.8.0 2003-01-27 Frontier::RPC2(3)
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