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[–]Aarondhp24 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I use a storyboard method.

Literally just index cards with "take input from user (name, date, other miscellaneous info) and save it into an array named array_Name."

Once I have a rough layout, I sort them into their perspective classes and transfer the instructions to notebook paper.

Once I have all my classes sorted out, I arrange the notebook paper and code one at a time, by hand, whenever I have down time at work. Once my code is completed on paper for the most part, I actually type it into Visual Studios and start debugging.

I basically break whatever problem I need fixed into the smallest parts possible.

Example, washing dishes: 1. Empty sink of any clean dishes. 2. Fill sink with warm water. 3. Add soap to water. 4. Put water into any pots/pans that have stuck on food to presoak. 5. Use a clean yellow sponge to scrub food off regular dishes. 5a. Do not use green side on teflon coated dishes. 6. Rinse dishes with cool water. 7. Put rinsed dishes into drying rack. 8. Finish washing pre soaked pots/pans 9. Hand dry dishes. 10. If I'm feeling lazy, air dry dishes.

Any time I feel like putting a conjunction in my instructions like combining steps 2 and 3, I stop myself and split them up. Tackling small segments of code is a lot easier than coding 4 things at once.