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  3. Am I a bad programmer?

Am I a bad programmer?

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  • T this drink beer

    Well done. Obviously this was a deliferate mistale. for your cunning, you win the number 547521456988. Had you noticed the deliferate mistale just 3 minutes earlier you would have taken the Ferrari ;)

    B Offline
    B Offline
    Big Daddy Farang
    wrote on last edited by
    #36

    this.drink(beer) wrote:

    deliferate mistale

    Eye new that.

    this.drink(beer) wrote:

    just 3 minutes earlier

    Darn the luck! BDF

    T 1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • B Big Daddy Farang

      this.drink(beer) wrote:

      deliferate mistale

      Eye new that.

      this.drink(beer) wrote:

      just 3 minutes earlier

      Darn the luck! BDF

      T Offline
      T Offline
      this drink beer
      wrote on last edited by
      #37

      Seriously though, the interchanging of its and it's bugs me too. I should hang my head in shame.

      1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • M Member 96

        Living with the U.S. as our next door neighbour puts certain strains and pressures on the English language.


        "I don't want more choice. I just want better things!" - Edina Monsoon

        M Offline
        M Offline
        mejojo
        wrote on last edited by
        #38

        What are you on aboot, eh? J

        M 1 Reply Last reply
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        • D declassified

          So, the company I work for is pretty small, only about 8 developers. The biggest (web) app is very complicated and is chalk full of errors. To compound the issue, there is absolutly ZERO documentation in the code / database. The DB also has no Foriegn Key contraints and is only marginally normalized. I don't work on the app that much, so I'm not as familiar as everyone else is with it. Whenever a problem comes up, they can jump right to the problem, but it sometimes takes me hours.... The question is "Am I a bad programmer, or are they?" Most of us were drilled with the "document your code" as we were learning either by instructors or books, but no one here does that (except me).:mad: As far as new development goes, IMHO I think I am *better* because I grasp the concepts of normalization, documentation, OOD. All new concepts to them. I had to explain normalization and pursuede them to let me do it on some new tables I added!:mad: And this is no hole-in-the-wall company either, they have some BIG clients. Well, thanks for letting me beef!

          P Offline
          P Offline
          patbob
          wrote on last edited by
          #39

          You are the programmer I'd rather hire for my own group. They are not. However, if we needed work done very, very quickly, they are the people I'd need in my group because they keep a model of how the software works in their head -- that's the documentation for it -- and can quickly reference it and jump to where the problem is. This is the way I solve programming problems when I can because there's just no beating it for speed, but I also try to do good OOD and document everything too (more for my own future reference than anything). So.. why would I rather have people like you in my group, even if you are not going to get work done as quickly as they can? For four reasons: 1) they are probably writing spaghetti code (most programmers I've seen that are like that do). 2) (1) means that the code gets exponentially less maintainable over time. The way you've been trained makes it less maintainable over time, but not exponentially, which means changes cost less to make for a lot longer and refactoring piecemeal(!) is possible when things get too bad. 3) they are irreplaceable. If they unexpectedly get hurt and stuck in the hospital for a week, nobody can do their jobs for them. If they get behind schedule, or the changes needed are just too significant for them to handle all alone in time, nobody can help them out. If they choose to leave the company, nobody can pick up where they left off without a very steep, very _long_ learning curve. The project schedule is at risk from their vacations, potentially leaving it stuck until they get back. 4) given time, you'll get as good as they are, but because of (1), (2) & (3), you'll be BETTER than they ever can be. I've seen all of this from multiple sides now, and am blessed to be working in a group consisting all of people like you. They are the best team I've ever worked with in my career.

          patbob

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          • M mejojo

            What are you on aboot, eh? J

            M Offline
            M Offline
            Member 96
            wrote on last edited by
            #40

            I live on the West Coast man, we don't speak like that around here, you're thinking of the east coast.


            Never trust machinery more complicated than a knife and fork. - Jubal Harshaw in Stranger in a Strange Land

            M M 2 Replies Last reply
            0
            • M Member 96

              Living with the U.S. as our next door neighbour puts certain strains and pressures on the English language.


              "I don't want more choice. I just want better things!" - Edina Monsoon

              G Offline
              G Offline
              ghle
              wrote on last edited by
              #41

              John Cardinal wrote:

              U.S. as our next door neighbour

              Neighbour, eh neighbor?

              Gary

              1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • D declassified

                So, the company I work for is pretty small, only about 8 developers. The biggest (web) app is very complicated and is chalk full of errors. To compound the issue, there is absolutly ZERO documentation in the code / database. The DB also has no Foriegn Key contraints and is only marginally normalized. I don't work on the app that much, so I'm not as familiar as everyone else is with it. Whenever a problem comes up, they can jump right to the problem, but it sometimes takes me hours.... The question is "Am I a bad programmer, or are they?" Most of us were drilled with the "document your code" as we were learning either by instructors or books, but no one here does that (except me).:mad: As far as new development goes, IMHO I think I am *better* because I grasp the concepts of normalization, documentation, OOD. All new concepts to them. I had to explain normalization and pursuede them to let me do it on some new tables I added!:mad: And this is no hole-in-the-wall company either, they have some BIG clients. Well, thanks for letting me beef!

                E Offline
                E Offline
                ednrgc
                wrote on last edited by
                #42

                In one sense, you are, because your can't adapt to udder stupidity. :rolleyes::laugh:

                V 1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • M Member 96

                  Living with the U.S. as our next door neighbour puts certain strains and pressures on the English language.


                  "I don't want more choice. I just want better things!" - Edina Monsoon

                  D Offline
                  D Offline
                  deltalmg
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #43

                  Do what now? Them Americans aint got bad english, 'aight?

                  D 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • D deltalmg

                    Do what now? Them Americans aint got bad english, 'aight?

                    D Offline
                    D Offline
                    deltalmg
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #44

                    Oh yeah, and I've had US customers complain that they talked to someone from India who couldn't speak American. Apparently that is what some of them think they speak. Generalizations don't work though, as almost every culture has their own set of corruptions/slag, eg. bloke, eh, good 'eye', bye etc. IMHO, language isn't communication unless the other person understands you, but if they do it is almost fair game to do whatever you want with it, at least as long as you are obeying the social norms of the region.

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • M Member 96

                      I live on the West Coast man, we don't speak like that around here, you're thinking of the east coast.


                      Never trust machinery more complicated than a knife and fork. - Jubal Harshaw in Stranger in a Strange Land

                      M Offline
                      M Offline
                      Mike Poz
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #45

                      East coasters know how to talk, it's just that the *rest* of the world doesn't know how to listen... :-D

                      Mike Poz

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • D declassified

                        So, the company I work for is pretty small, only about 8 developers. The biggest (web) app is very complicated and is chalk full of errors. To compound the issue, there is absolutly ZERO documentation in the code / database. The DB also has no Foriegn Key contraints and is only marginally normalized. I don't work on the app that much, so I'm not as familiar as everyone else is with it. Whenever a problem comes up, they can jump right to the problem, but it sometimes takes me hours.... The question is "Am I a bad programmer, or are they?" Most of us were drilled with the "document your code" as we were learning either by instructors or books, but no one here does that (except me).:mad: As far as new development goes, IMHO I think I am *better* because I grasp the concepts of normalization, documentation, OOD. All new concepts to them. I had to explain normalization and pursuede them to let me do it on some new tables I added!:mad: And this is no hole-in-the-wall company either, they have some BIG clients. Well, thanks for letting me beef!

                        L Offline
                        L Offline
                        Lost User
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #46

                        For once, I'm glad I work alone. When I was 12 and writing blackjack programs on my Vic-20, my older brother told me that it's important to always document my programs as good practice for when I was an adult. He was right then and your right now. The thing is, what if they all died in a horrible car accident tomorrow (don't get any ideas) and other programmers were brought into take over for them. They would be so mad!

                        Shohom67

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • T this drink beer

                          Nearly everyone in this thread has used bad English. You cannot combine your and you're as they have different meanings; the first is used when referring to something that is owned by a person (the possessive form of you), the second is a contraction of 'you are'. Again, the apostrophe in Achilles' is a used to denote possession, as in John's car, we just don't add an s to a word that ends in an s. Its the same thing for Their, There, They're. They all have different meanings. If you use bad English, it makes anything you write harder to read, and the reader might well make judgments about the person who wrote it. IMHO Gramr iS Gr8 :) LoL

                          L Offline
                          L Offline
                          Lost User
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #47

                          You should go after the caption cats next!

                          Shohom67

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • B Big Daddy Farang

                            this.drink(beer) wrote:

                            Its the same thing

                            Excuse me for interrupting, I just feel like two cents for bringing this up, but.... That should be "it's," the contraction of it is. "Its" is the possessive. Talk about the pot calling the kettle black! ;) BDF

                            L Offline
                            L Offline
                            Lost User
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #48

                            ROFL!

                            Shohom67

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • D declassified

                              So, the company I work for is pretty small, only about 8 developers. The biggest (web) app is very complicated and is chalk full of errors. To compound the issue, there is absolutly ZERO documentation in the code / database. The DB also has no Foriegn Key contraints and is only marginally normalized. I don't work on the app that much, so I'm not as familiar as everyone else is with it. Whenever a problem comes up, they can jump right to the problem, but it sometimes takes me hours.... The question is "Am I a bad programmer, or are they?" Most of us were drilled with the "document your code" as we were learning either by instructors or books, but no one here does that (except me).:mad: As far as new development goes, IMHO I think I am *better* because I grasp the concepts of normalization, documentation, OOD. All new concepts to them. I had to explain normalization and pursuede them to let me do it on some new tables I added!:mad: And this is no hole-in-the-wall company either, they have some BIG clients. Well, thanks for letting me beef!

                              M Offline
                              M Offline
                              MrPlankton
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #49

                              Well of course all the documentation you need can be implied in the unit tests. hahaha

                              MrPlankton

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • D declassified

                                So, the company I work for is pretty small, only about 8 developers. The biggest (web) app is very complicated and is chalk full of errors. To compound the issue, there is absolutly ZERO documentation in the code / database. The DB also has no Foriegn Key contraints and is only marginally normalized. I don't work on the app that much, so I'm not as familiar as everyone else is with it. Whenever a problem comes up, they can jump right to the problem, but it sometimes takes me hours.... The question is "Am I a bad programmer, or are they?" Most of us were drilled with the "document your code" as we were learning either by instructors or books, but no one here does that (except me).:mad: As far as new development goes, IMHO I think I am *better* because I grasp the concepts of normalization, documentation, OOD. All new concepts to them. I had to explain normalization and pursuede them to let me do it on some new tables I added!:mad: And this is no hole-in-the-wall company either, they have some BIG clients. Well, thanks for letting me beef!

                                M Offline
                                M Offline
                                MrPlankton
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #50

                                Yes/No. Depends if managment is aware of condition of product. If they don't you will be percieved as "bad", your future is in question. If they do they will cut you some slack, but you will spend all your time becomming familiar with the product and perhaps not enough in keeping your skill set up to date, your future is in question.

                                MrPlankton

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • M Member 96

                                  I live on the West Coast man, we don't speak like that around here, you're thinking of the east coast.


                                  Never trust machinery more complicated than a knife and fork. - Jubal Harshaw in Stranger in a Strange Land

                                  M Offline
                                  M Offline
                                  Michael H
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #51

                                  Ok, you guys have gone incredibly off topic and are incredibly pedantic. I've seen more nitpicking in here than in a buffet restaurant! As long as you understand it there shouldn't be any problem. I think everyone here needs to relax a bit. Not everyone was meant to be perfect. In Similar regards to the topic at hand, clearly you are trying to enforce good practices with everyone. But everyone believes that as long as they and others can understand 'their' code then its all fine. Putting forth good practice in programming is good, no, in fact its the best thing to do. I for one always look to the correct solutions to doing things. But one has to ask himself when to stop at doing everything the right way. People who are unaware of this concept usually opt for the cheaper way out of things, or it might simply be because they don't know how to correctly address the problem in the best way. In all, don't be discouraged by the lack of commented code and the amount of crap thats in there. Just do what you have to do, do it right and then get out of there. May I recommend you try finding another job elsewhere where they actually don't give you so much crap? =P

                                  I like to make it apparent when I'm running out of ideas... ... ... ...

                                  M 1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • M Michael H

                                    Ok, you guys have gone incredibly off topic and are incredibly pedantic. I've seen more nitpicking in here than in a buffet restaurant! As long as you understand it there shouldn't be any problem. I think everyone here needs to relax a bit. Not everyone was meant to be perfect. In Similar regards to the topic at hand, clearly you are trying to enforce good practices with everyone. But everyone believes that as long as they and others can understand 'their' code then its all fine. Putting forth good practice in programming is good, no, in fact its the best thing to do. I for one always look to the correct solutions to doing things. But one has to ask himself when to stop at doing everything the right way. People who are unaware of this concept usually opt for the cheaper way out of things, or it might simply be because they don't know how to correctly address the problem in the best way. In all, don't be discouraged by the lack of commented code and the amount of crap thats in there. Just do what you have to do, do it right and then get out of there. May I recommend you try finding another job elsewhere where they actually don't give you so much crap? =P

                                    I like to make it apparent when I'm running out of ideas... ... ... ...

                                    M Offline
                                    M Offline
                                    Member 96
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #52

                                    Not to be pedantic or anything but I think your post is in the wrong branch of this thread. :)


                                    Never trust machinery more complicated than a knife and fork. - Jubal Harshaw in Stranger in a Strange Land

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • D declassified

                                      So, the company I work for is pretty small, only about 8 developers. The biggest (web) app is very complicated and is chalk full of errors. To compound the issue, there is absolutly ZERO documentation in the code / database. The DB also has no Foriegn Key contraints and is only marginally normalized. I don't work on the app that much, so I'm not as familiar as everyone else is with it. Whenever a problem comes up, they can jump right to the problem, but it sometimes takes me hours.... The question is "Am I a bad programmer, or are they?" Most of us were drilled with the "document your code" as we were learning either by instructors or books, but no one here does that (except me).:mad: As far as new development goes, IMHO I think I am *better* because I grasp the concepts of normalization, documentation, OOD. All new concepts to them. I had to explain normalization and pursuede them to let me do it on some new tables I added!:mad: And this is no hole-in-the-wall company either, they have some BIG clients. Well, thanks for letting me beef!

                                      V Offline
                                      V Offline
                                      VanityClaw
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #53

                                      You are not a "bad" programmer - not based on what you have said, anyway. I've been there, man - It sucks. I found it painful at best, and spent most of my time behind schedule because I never could remember to build in a day or two for dealing with (what I call) "The Stupid", and (after failng to lobby for meaningful change) I eventually just left for greener pastures. You have to be diligent, while you're where you are, to not let the bad habits and poor planning of your fellows undo your own talents. Keep up the skills they refuse to use and put them to work for you (if they wont let you put it to work for them) and use it to get a position at a more sensible company. There ARE sensible companies out here. :suss: JB

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                                      • D Dostoevsky

                                        Documentation? OOD? Ha! I have been programming C++ for 15 years and the only thing that counts in any company is how long you take to complete the task. Time is money.

                                        V Offline
                                        V Offline
                                        VanityClaw
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #54

                                        I love short-sighted people.... They're easy to rob. :suss: JB

                                        B 1 Reply Last reply
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                                        • E ednrgc

                                          In one sense, you are, because your can't adapt to udder stupidity. :rolleyes::laugh:

                                          V Offline
                                          V Offline
                                          VanityClaw
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #55

                                          I fail to see what cows have to do this topic.... :suss: JB

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