Sometimes I work with the autopilot on. It happens when there is a series of simple things to do in a small amount of time. The priority become to mark all the items of the to-do list before turn off the PC and go home.
Since the tasks are quite trivial, there is no need to think about a fancy way to solve them: it's just code to write. But sometimes it happens that, after accomplishing everything, I ask to myself: "why the hell did I do that?!"
Usually the answer is: "because I was thinking about a fast solution, not a good solution". So I have to rewrite and spend more time in something that could have been done better the first time.
[ By the way, the philosophy "just make it run" is something that I consider totally awful. ]
But right after reading this article, I felt like a door was opened in front of me. Now I know what I have to do: spend five minutes in thinking before, instead of one hour after to rewrite.
You know, thinking is always a smart thing.
![By innoxiuss (Thinking at Hell's gate) [CC-BY-2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons The Thinker Musee Rodin](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjcAlcSpcdhisFAg6D2xLVgfoAkJGQ88pcmcmBfoAthuUTYN4GDWszWKugrNiWiYs4Gi32cF4OeKi6ii7g6h43AB-w8_GmlmzdEcCIMj5v97QqIWp1KqunPCeqMaZCZpGUYm4eVSpMtil0/s1600/180px-The_Thinker_Musee_Rodin.jpg)


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