chainpullz wrote:
Please, I'm a Mathematician. You don't want to get into an argument about logic with me.
That's what we're doing right now, and you're not doing good so far! Bring it on.
chainpullz wrote:
G3TTR1GG3R3D wrote:
strict full alternating streams/bursts/fast taps because that's where the advantage comes in.
Uh, then that's not "strict" alternating. Even single tappers keep perfect key counts on individual bursts/streams. I'm not misinterpreting your writing, you are using the terminology incorrectly.
...he means keeping up his alternation when it comes to starting triplets streams bursts etc. xy...x - yx...y instead of xy...x - xy...x.
chainpullz wrote:
Except messy alternation isn't a bad thing. Hitting 300s is more important than perfect alternation.
No shit, being accurate is important, but for our argument it has no relevance, you can be accurate with either style.
But as I've already explained, there's a benefit to keeping up proper alternation (xyx yxy), otherwise you're back to your singletapping limits at these parts.
chainpullz wrote:
\qed
Your pompous rundown serves no purpose, other than desperately trying to look smart. Guess what, proudly writing qed after adding 1 and 1 makes you look stupid.
chainpullz wrote:
The whole idea of being able to start patterns on either finger is that you have the flexibility of double tapping or alternating. Practicing with this script will lessen your ability to hit with either finger.
Practicing with this script will make sure that you start with whichever finger comes next. To do that, you need to be able to start triples/streams with BOTH of your fingers freely, and to beginner alternators this is a challange. If they concentrate, they can alternate 1/2s, but when it's two triples or more complicated patterns, somtimes they'll use their main finger twice instead of alternating the starting finger (xyx yxy). Thus the script helps with starting on either finger as neeed during alternation.
Switching between singletapping xyx xyx and alternating xyx yxy during hard parts is what we call messy alternation, and mixing them there is OBVIOUSLY not what you want to do, when you're trying to alternate. The script helps you get rid of this, and do proper alternation, where you have no problem starting on either finger as needed (so that you gain full benefit of the alternation, which you're trying to do) at harder parts too.
You failed at reading comprehension twice (as in WHY he's trying to use the script), you failed at understanding what benefits there are to proper alternation, you failed at understanding how the script helps with what he's trying to achieve.