>>13757837>t. has never programmed in their lifeI don't know the syntax of this specific programming language, but I can almost guarantee there is a way to introduce an integer-valued variable i and then inductively define the this.showDose(i) command for arbitrary integral values of the variable i. If I said something incorrectly, or I failed to use proper terminology, I apologize for that because I not a software engineer or a code monkey, I'm a grad student in mathematics, but from a logical perspective, my point is that this command could be inductively defined so you wouldn't have to specify a fixed number (in this case 8) of vaccinations.
If that's wrong, then please explain how or why. I have at least been honest that I'm not an expert on coding, although I do have some experience, and I do have a solid understanding of combinatorics, logic, and optimization problems, so that is helpful with interpreting algorithms and computer code. Of course, I genuinely don't know. Perhaps this is not a command that could be iterated? Maybe that's the case, and I am completely wrong, but if that's so, please explain or point out why I'm wrong. Like I said, I'm not experienced with Java, and I don't know exactly what this code is trying to do, so that could be the case and I could be wrong, but from what I'm look at, from the perspective of a mathfag who is admittedly a CSlet, this just looks like shitty code. But again, I'm not an expert on this subject, so I'm perfectly willing to admit that I'm wrong, and I recognize that this could very well be the case - something that authoritarian normies like yourself seem to be incapable of.
By the way, you're the only one falling victim to Dunning-Kruger. I'm not claiming to know what I'm talking about. In fact, I'm doing the exact opposite. I'm sharing my best guess as someone who is not an expert, and I'm explicitly acknowledging this fact. You, on the other hand, are doing the exact opposite.