Re: comic guide to OOP

2006-09-13 Thread Mike Tangorre
From: "Michael Dinowitz" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > Once bitten, twice shy, three times exhausted. This is why we don't have a > cartoon on FA. We had one and people took offense. And that was just a > joke. I've got a script for a cartoon guide to OOP that's great, but has a > few risqué pieces. I'd

Re: comic guide to OOP

2006-09-12 Thread Robert Munn
Yeah, that will probably tick off a few people, but you have hit on the TechTV formula for success, although if you really wanted to follow the TechTV formula, you would give one of the hot showgirls a featured role, like explaining OO concepts with risque talk about female anatomy. On 9/12/06, Mi

Re: comic guide to OOP

2006-09-12 Thread Michael Dinowitz
Each honk represents the grabbing of an *object* for emphasis. "Each use of the mold gives you a different shape.Each is the same thing in concept but different in look and feel." In case I'm not being clear enough in my euphemism, he's honking each showgirl's breast to show that each is an obje

Re: comic guide to OOP

2006-09-12 Thread C. Hatton Humphrey
I like comics and I like CF but I don't know if the two match... Userfriendly.org is the closest thing I know of to programmer humor that has made sense to me. But what's with the *honk*s? This writer work on sesame street or something? ~~~

comic guide to OOP

2006-09-12 Thread Michael Dinowitz
Once bitten, twice shy, three times exhausted. This is why we don't have a cartoon on FA. We had one and people took offense. And that was just a joke. I've got a script for a cartoon guide to OOP that's great, but has a few risqué pieces. I'd love to put it up but I know I'm going to piss someo