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  3. Am I a bad programmer?

Am I a bad programmer?

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  • F Fred_Smith

    John Cardinal wrote:

    Achilles heel

    :-) strictly speaking, of course, there should be an apostrophe in there: Achilles' heel :-)

    K Offline
    K Offline
    kfinlon
    wrote on last edited by
    #63

    Actually, according to the last example of Rule 2 at http://www.grammarbook.com/punctuation/apostro.asp[^] , because the name is singular (even though it ends with s), the correct version is "Achilles's".

    F 1 Reply Last reply
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    • K kfinlon

      Actually, according to the last example of Rule 2 at http://www.grammarbook.com/punctuation/apostro.asp[^] , because the name is singular (even though it ends with s), the correct version is "Achilles's".

      F Offline
      F Offline
      Fred_Smith
      wrote on last edited by
      #64

      What do Americans know about English? Bah, I say... I defy you to find ONE example in *Englsih* literature anywhere that uses that abomination! "Achilles's" indeed. :rolleyes: :^)

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      • F Fred_Smith

        What do Americans know about English? Bah, I say... I defy you to find ONE example in *Englsih* literature anywhere that uses that abomination! "Achilles's" indeed. :rolleyes: :^)

        K Offline
        K Offline
        kfinlon
        wrote on last edited by
        #65

        Is there a SPELL CHECKER for the *Englsih* language?

        F 1 Reply Last reply
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        • K kfinlon

          Is there a SPELL CHECKER for the *Englsih* language?

          F Offline
          F Offline
          Fred_Smith
          wrote on last edited by
          #66

          It's in our genes... we only spell things the way we do to annoy and confuse the French!

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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!

            M Offline
            M Offline
            Michael Bergman
            wrote on last edited by
            #67

            Bad Programmer! BAAAAD Programmer (I say as I smack you on the nose with a rolled up newspaper)! Now go outside and don't come back in until you are paper-trained. :)

            m.bergman

            -- For Bruce Schneier, quanta only have one state : afraid.

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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!

              R Offline
              R Offline
              rhp8090
              wrote on last edited by
              #68

              While the rest of the clowns in here debate the nuances of shades-of-gray grammatical meaningless, I will try to give you a reasonable answer. GET THE H@LL of that place now before they ruin you for life!!! Find a group that appreciates the proper way of doing IT and go to it now. There are plenty of fine companies that know what is the right way. Your current company is on the road to disaster. I am serious - save your soul and get out now.

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              • F Fred_Smith

                What do Americans know about English? Bah, I say... I defy you to find ONE example in *Englsih* literature anywhere that uses that abomination! "Achilles's" indeed. :rolleyes: :^)

                C Offline
                C Offline
                ChrisNic
                wrote on last edited by
                #69

                That reminds me: Last month I couldn't spell programmer, now I is one. Chris

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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!

                  A Offline
                  A Offline
                  a pepe
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #70

                  You're not a bad programmer. I work in a company with the same problems. Now I'm still working on a project started 2 years ago, and with me there are 3 programmers. I wrote some code, other parts were written by each other. Every line of code, every table in the DB, and every flow is still undocumented at all. :confused: Unfortunately it's hard to make the company's boss understand this :mad: when you was selected on the task. To them, the only important thing is to solve the problem in the faster and less expensive solution. :cool: regards, Aniel

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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!

                    E Offline
                    E Offline
                    escray
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #71

                    Where are you? I think the story you told is common in here, China, Especially in small company. XP? Don't teach me english, give me code:)

                    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!

                      T Offline
                      T Offline
                      ThisSuz
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #72

                      Sounds so much like the company that I used to work for. Good Luck... in some cases, the more time you spend on trying to prove someone isn't doing their job correctly and the less time you spend actually working turns out poorly in the end. Let me know what your perspective is in 20 years...

                      Suz

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