Quote:
Originally Posted by patrik
If you work on something, why would you "quit" it before it's finished?
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Because it's time for dinner, or it's time to go bed. When I'm working on my car and it gets dark on me, I don't leave all of my tools scattered around the driveway. I put them away for the night and start over in the morning.
Quote:
Originally Posted by patrik
In a world of bugs and memory leaks, I get that there may be reasons for restarting programs, but that's a work-around, not a good workflow.
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I get what you're saying. But in reality, what we're talking about is one extra mouse click when wrapping up, and two (or one depending on personal settings) to fire things back up again. Not exactly a productivity suck. What you call a "workaround" I call "normal." Leaving programs and documents open for days at a time doesn't sound like "good workflow" to me. It sounds like an invitation for accidents and issues. By the same logic, why would someone ever close a program? Why not just leave multiple instances of every program installed on your computer running at all times? Surely that would be the most efficient workflow?
Quote:
Originally Posted by patrik
If it makes it too hard to find any bugs, ok, you guys are doing a fantastic job and you choose what you work on. Nemas problemas
I took the chance that it may give you any clues.
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I DO appreciate it (even if it doesn't always sound like it). Thanks