Newsletter
Who's asking
June 9, 2020
The answer may depend on the questioner - not just the question.
Wanting to know
News travelled quickly last week of the death of someone I grew up with. People asked on FaceBook, "what did he die of".
It took me back fourteen years to the death of my daughter Elena. People asked us that all the time. Sometimes I told them, sometimes I didn't.
The question that became harder for Kim and me to answer was the casual question from someone who met us years later and didn't know us or know anything about us.
We'd be at a school event, or will have just mentioned our eldest daughter Maggie, or were just getting to know the person and they'd ask, "how many children do you have."
Kim and I talked about that a lot.
How do you answer?
If we answer "two" then inevitably the fact that Elena died would come up and then that becomes the focus of the conversation or the end of the conversation.
If we answer "one" are we denying Elena's life somehow?
Kim and I independently came to the same conclusion: it depended on who was asking and our relationship or expected relationship with that person.
The four children
During Passover the youngest child asks the four questions. But that is followed by an analysis of questions asked by four different children.
The wise child has done the work and refers to specific things they have considered and asks specific questions about them. We are instructed to teach this child everything they want to know.
The wicked child removes themself from the situation. In the midst of a story about their peoples' history as slaves this child asks "What does this mean to you?" The text dwells on this that because this child removes themself from the community and the history there is little that can be done for them.
I have a pretty progressive Hagaddah but it says that you must make them feel uncomfortable and stress that this attitude is what keeps this child from being redeemed.
The third child is the simple child. The child cares and wants to understand but it doesn't yet have the context.
The fourth child doesn't even know how to ask the question.
I've always thought that the seder serves as the telling of the story in a way that these two begin to see what they need to know and do. That it is our job to help them mature to a point where they will become either a wise child or a wicked child.
Stupid questions
When I used to teach, I taught mathematics and I taught teachers. I've seen at least a thousand different presenters over the years and so many of them try to be encouraging by saying, "there are no stupid questions."
There are stupid questions.
There are inappropriate questions.
There are questions that don't need to be asked.
There are questions that the questioner hasn't earned the right to ask.
There are questions that are perfectly fine - but I'm just not able to answer you right now for any number of reasons.
"But Daniel," you ask, "what does that have to do with what's going on right now?"
If you do even a little work first to show that you are working on becoming the wise child, people will help you get there.
Link to the Podcast episode from June 9, 2023.
The language we use
Several people have become concerned with some of the language we use in our apps and projects. One that has been raised this week is naming the main branch in a git project "master".
Whether or not you find it offensive, whether or not you think anyone should be bothered by it, it's not hard to make this change that some people are bothered by. If you feel strongly that the name must remain, you've stopped reading well before this point.
If not, here's an article by Scott Hanselman Easily rename your Git default branch from master to main.
Also, here's an article by Daniel Tull on creating a git repo with a different default branch name: Renaming git's default master branch.
Voice work
I wrote a blog post looking forward to Apple's upcoming WWDC conference that I titled Pre Dub-Dub.
A friend DM'd me to remind me that there are a lot of people new to our community that don't know "Dub Dub" is the affectionate shorthand for WWDC.
It took me back to my radio days working for stations such as WERI, WMJI, WDMT, WNWV - uggh they all begin with "W". I can't tell you the work that gets done learning to say "W" and not pronouncing it "Dubba-ya" but not making it sound long and drawn out and too formal as "Double-you".
At the same time I came across this video of a voice actor named Stefan Johnson that just made me laugh. A day in the life of a full time voice actor captures so much of that world and he has pipes and delivery that I am extremely jealous of.
Maggie's link
Maggie's cat Egg Nog (which she calls "Egg") appeared in an Instagram from the place she adopted him from.
I'm not one to share cat pictures - but this one has lots of character.
Other people's stuff
Ben Scheirman keeps putting out great videos for iOS developers. If you don't subscribe to NSScreencast you should definitely take a moment and give it a look.
Here's a link to Sizing Things Equally in SwiftUI.