having a clear mind xiōng Yǒu chéng zhú
[Explanation] It originally refers to having a complete image of the bamboo in your mind before you start painting. It is a metaphor for having an idea in mind before doing something; having a plan or being sure. Cheng: completely.
[Quotes] Su Shi of the Song Dynasty wrote in "The Story of Yanzhu in the Yundang Valley" written by Su Shi of the Song Dynasty: "In order to paint bamboo, you must first have the bamboo in your heart; when you pick up the pen and look at it familiarly, you will see what you want to paint. "Get up in a hurry and follow it; move straight and straight; chase what it sees; like a rabbit rising and a falcon falling; it will disappear after a short period of time."
[Distinguish the shape] Bamboo cannot be written as "foot".
[Synonym] Having a plan in mind, having a clear idea
[Antonym] Having countless things in mind, having no clue
[Usage] Used as a compliment. Describes people who are very strategic in doing things. Generally used as predicate, attributive, and adverbial.
[Structure] Subject-predicate formula.
[Analysis] ~ and "have a plan in mind"; both mean "have a plan in mind". However, it emphasizes that the problem has been fully considered and solved beforehand; or it is calm and composed because it has an idea in mind; "knowing what is known" emphasizes having an understanding of the objective situation.
[Example]
①I am worried that I will not be able to complete the task this time; Lao Wu~ said: "No problem\".
② Be fully prepared in advance; you can only do it when it happens; you will not panic.
[English translation] have the right answer for