I'm an STEM undergrad student, so I have to pay attention to the little details in excersices like numbers. But I tend to make stupid mistakes like seeing a plus where it's a minus, or changing something like "x>0" for "x<0"
What kind of excersices can I do to correct this?
Please dont make anything that could cause people serious harm if it breaks. No bridge building. No bomb engineering. No skyscrapers.
>>16896785
I'm a CS major and have the same problem. I basically just have to double check everything constantly. It's a huge pain in the ass and I still can't catch them all, and obviously the compiler doesn't think < is wrong if > is right, but it just means I have to keep rereading and checking everything and putting my code through more tests.
tl;dr constantly reread EVERYTHING and take >>16896839 advice
I actually have big respect and admiration for those who do skyscrapers abbe things like that, and I actually try to avoid doing things like that, but I don't know where I might end, so I want to start working on that now.
>>16896950
>abbe
Didn't double check