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good programmer

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  • D devvvy

    sometimes i thought to myself, for one to be really good programmer, you need to be unemployed. To get away from daily fire fighting, the long hours, the politics. Is it true, best programmers are generally unemployed? (I know one thing they can't be behind bars)

    dev

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    Zhat
    wrote on last edited by
    #63

    And what does employment status have to do with someone being a good/great/mediocre programmer? I've seen some great programmers employed as well as unemployed. I've seen just as many living in the US as there are in Europe/Asia... And then there's the question of what defines a good programmer??? What you think defines a good programmer (unemployed) to me means he/she is just unemployed without regard to programming skills. In short, the answer is: 42

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    • M MidwestLimey

      Hows about this twisted logic: If you're not good at marketing, you're not good at communicating. If you're not good at communicating, you're never going to understand the user. If you can't understand the user, you're not a very good programmer. Ergo, they're not good programmers.

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      BrienMalone
      wrote on last edited by
      #64

      Flawed logic. A good programmer with poor communication and marketing skills is such a ubiquitous concept it is a stereotype.

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      • D devvvy

        sometimes i thought to myself, for one to be really good programmer, you need to be unemployed. To get away from daily fire fighting, the long hours, the politics. Is it true, best programmers are generally unemployed? (I know one thing they can't be behind bars)

        dev

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        J J 6502
        wrote on last edited by
        #65

        Back in the 70's when programmers where "Barn Stormers" and Artists you could get away with being unEmployed and free to experiment. These days Programming is like making movies. Have you ever seen a movie with only one person in the credits. This comes best in a work enviroment. This old mans opinion is that you need a good team to build modern software. The team must have people skills, Engineering skills, artists, Programmers, Finance , Ect.. and a team leader to keep all the wheels going.

        modified on Thursday, May 21, 2009 8:18 AM

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        • J JimmyRopes

          devvvy wrote:

          wait... perhaps a simpler example: how do you explain britney, she's (well *was*) in demand.

          In some circles she still is. :~

          Simply Elegant Designs JimmyRopes Designs
          Think inside the box! ProActive Secure Systems
          I'm on-line therefore I am. JimmyRopes

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          BrienMalone
          wrote on last edited by
          #66

          Good grief, guys. These massively flawed analogies are making Aristotle spin in his grave. I understand where you are coming from with the unemployed bit... I miss the early 80s when I used to rush home from Jr high as fast as I could so I could work on bit blitting in assembler on my Tandy 1000. You are talking about having time to hone skills. Unfortunately everyone (to this point in the thread) has latched on to "employability" which was not the point. As far as having time to hone your skills goes, the state of unemployment is only useful if you don't have to worry about money. A better environment for honing skills is one where you have a job that presents you with challenging coding opportunities and a manager who protects you from the BS that interferes with your ability to code.

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          • C Christian Graus

            I think it's obvious. If you're good, you will be in demand.

            Christian Graus Driven to the arms of OSX by Vista. "I am new to programming world. I have been learning c# for about past four weeks. I am quite acquainted with the fundamentals of c#. Now I have to work on a project which converts given flat files to XML using the XML serialization method" - SK64 ( but the forums have stuff like this posted every day )

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            Fabio Franco
            wrote on last edited by
            #67

            I agree. One might even loose for a worse programmer in a job interview for the lack of marketing skills, but eventually this person will land on a job. A good programmer won't fail everytime. A good programmer is good at logic, and therefore will learn what went wrong in previous interviews and will try to make it better next time.

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            • B BrienMalone

              Good grief, guys. These massively flawed analogies are making Aristotle spin in his grave. I understand where you are coming from with the unemployed bit... I miss the early 80s when I used to rush home from Jr high as fast as I could so I could work on bit blitting in assembler on my Tandy 1000. You are talking about having time to hone skills. Unfortunately everyone (to this point in the thread) has latched on to "employability" which was not the point. As far as having time to hone your skills goes, the state of unemployment is only useful if you don't have to worry about money. A better environment for honing skills is one where you have a job that presents you with challenging coding opportunities and a manager who protects you from the BS that interferes with your ability to code.

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              Fabio Franco
              wrote on last edited by
              #68

              BrienMalone wrote:

              As far as having time to hone your skills goes, the state of unemployment is only useful if you don't have to worry about money. A better environment for honing skills is one where you have a job that presents you with challenging coding opportunities and a manager who protects you from the BS that interferes with your ability to code.

              I completely agree. I started coding when I was 15 years old. By the age of 21, I had done a lot of coding. But much of this coding was for fun or very small enterprises (Uncle Ben's grocery store). At that time, I thought I was really good and knew everything. My mistake, BIG time. When I landed on my first job in a factory, I got a lot of demands and challenges I never had faced before. That forced me to pursue specific skills, no more kids game. By that time, I knew how much coding skills I lacked. Beeing employed not only made me a much better programmer, also forced me to code continuously wich is very good to gain experience. The only drawback, I think, is less time to learn new technologies and update your skills. I, for example, have little time to catch up with .Net 3.5 and 4.0 features. Fábio

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              • D devvvy

                sometimes i thought to myself, for one to be really good programmer, you need to be unemployed. To get away from daily fire fighting, the long hours, the politics. Is it true, best programmers are generally unemployed? (I know one thing they can't be behind bars)

                dev

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                Jonas Hammarberg
                wrote on last edited by
                #69

                No, not unless they choose to be...

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                • N Naturality

                  "Excellent programmers are out of the job because they try to market their theoretic potential (venture) rather than hard facts (results)" Huh, so all excellent programmers are physicists at heart?

                  "Sir, I protest. I am NOT a merry man!"

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                  micmanos
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #70

                  You're right, my apologies, allow me to better rephrase that .. Some programmers who could perform 'Profitably' with their skills have a hard time keeping a job because they try to market their theoretic potential instead of their actual skills. From a Bosses point of view that's just wrong because the JOB of a programmer doesn't lie within the boundaries of experimentation and learning. That's just my point though, nobody has to agree with that ... :|

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                  • B BrienMalone

                    Good grief, guys. These massively flawed analogies are making Aristotle spin in his grave. I understand where you are coming from with the unemployed bit... I miss the early 80s when I used to rush home from Jr high as fast as I could so I could work on bit blitting in assembler on my Tandy 1000. You are talking about having time to hone skills. Unfortunately everyone (to this point in the thread) has latched on to "employability" which was not the point. As far as having time to hone your skills goes, the state of unemployment is only useful if you don't have to worry about money. A better environment for honing skills is one where you have a job that presents you with challenging coding opportunities and a manager who protects you from the BS that interferes with your ability to code.

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                    JimmyRopes
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #71

                    BrienMalone wrote:

                    You are talking about having time to hone skills. Unfortunately everyone (to this point in the thread) has latched on to "employability" which was not the point.

                    I was talking about Britney Spears still being popular in some circles. :rolleyes: I didn't think that the subject (Britney that is – let’s not confuse the issue) would arouse such contempt as to be voted down for the statement. Popular or not she apparently still arouses emotions.

                    Simply Elegant Designs JimmyRopes Designs
                    Think inside the box! ProActive Secure Systems
                    I'm on-line therefore I am. JimmyRopes

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                    • D devvvy

                      sometimes i thought to myself, for one to be really good programmer, you need to be unemployed. To get away from daily fire fighting, the long hours, the politics. Is it true, best programmers are generally unemployed? (I know one thing they can't be behind bars)

                      dev

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                      patbob
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #72

                      The distractionless environment (e.g. unemployed) might help them concentrate and create great things, but it won't make a mediocre programmer a good one.

                      patbob

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                      • R Ray Cassick

                        I agree... http://www.enterprocity.com/blogs/2009/04/30/ArchitectsDevelopersAndProgrammersOhMy.aspx[^]


                        LinkedIn[^] | Blog[^] | Twitter[^]

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                        Old Ed
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #73

                        Your description of Architect, Developer and Programmer roles jibes with what I've found during my 30+ year career. Also, as I remember from the 70's and 80's, Systems Analysts were the Developers of today. And to add my $.02, the title Software Architect is far more meaningful than Software Engineer.

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                        • A Anna Jayne Metcalfe

                          And you think I wasn't working when I was learning? I run my own company, and believe me it's easily a 60 hour a week job keeping on top of everything... Prior to that I was working full time and learning. No different other than shorter hours, really. If you are tired, you may want to take a step back and look at how your day runs. I've found a decent diet, regular exercise (I run for at least half an hour most days) and better time management makes up for a lot. Even with 2 hrs of commuting a day (which I don't have to do now, thankfully) I was still able to keep learning at quite a rate. If I can do that while coping with a (very regular, unfortunately) 3 day migraine once a month, I'm sure you can find a way somehow. :)

                          Anna :rose: Having a bad bug day? Tech Blog | Anna's Place | Tears and Laughter "If mushy peas are the food of the devil, the stotty cake is the frisbee of God"

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                          JimmyRopes
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #74

                          Anna-Jayne Metcalfe wrote:

                          I run for at least half an hour most days

                          From what? ;)

                          Anna-Jayne Metcalfe wrote:

                          If I can do that while coping with a (very regular, unfortunately) 3 day migraine once a month, I'm sure you can find a way somehow.

                          I was going to make a snide remark here but it would probably give you a headache so I won't. :-D

                          Simply Elegant Designs JimmyRopes Designs
                          Think inside the box! ProActive Secure Systems
                          I'm on-line therefore I am. JimmyRopes

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                          • J JimmyRopes

                            Anna-Jayne Metcalfe wrote:

                            I run for at least half an hour most days

                            From what? ;)

                            Anna-Jayne Metcalfe wrote:

                            If I can do that while coping with a (very regular, unfortunately) 3 day migraine once a month, I'm sure you can find a way somehow.

                            I was going to make a snide remark here but it would probably give you a headache so I won't. :-D

                            Simply Elegant Designs JimmyRopes Designs
                            Think inside the box! ProActive Secure Systems
                            I'm on-line therefore I am. JimmyRopes

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                            A Offline
                            Anna Jayne Metcalfe
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #75

                            JimmyRopes wrote:

                            From what?

                            Anything with big teeth and a bad attitude, generally. ;)

                            JimmyRopes wrote:

                            I was going to make a snide remark here but it would probably give you a headache so I won't.

                            Snide doesn't usually work on me. :)

                            Anna :rose: Having a bad bug day? Tech Blog | Anna's Place | Tears and Laughter "If mushy peas are the food of the devil, the stotty cake is the frisbee of God"

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                            • A Anna Jayne Metcalfe

                              JimmyRopes wrote:

                              From what?

                              Anything with big teeth and a bad attitude, generally. ;)

                              JimmyRopes wrote:

                              I was going to make a snide remark here but it would probably give you a headache so I won't.

                              Snide doesn't usually work on me. :)

                              Anna :rose: Having a bad bug day? Tech Blog | Anna's Place | Tears and Laughter "If mushy peas are the food of the devil, the stotty cake is the frisbee of God"

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                              J Offline
                              JimmyRopes
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #76

                              Anna-Jayne Metcalfe wrote:

                              Snide doesn't usually work on me.

                              That's why I didn't do it. :-D

                              Simply Elegant Designs JimmyRopes Designs
                              Think inside the box! ProActive Secure Systems
                              I'm on-line therefore I am. JimmyRopes

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                              • K Kevin McFarlane

                                devvvy wrote:

                                Is it true, best programmers are generally unemployed?

                                No. There are good and bad programmers who are unemployed. There are good and bad programmers who are employed.

                                Kevin

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                                Amory Wong
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #77

                                I agree with Kevin's comment. However, I think the question in general is vague. Good can mean anything. Programming is such a wide field that I would argue that no one person can be an expert. Anyone who is good will specialize in certain areas, for instance: prototyping, user interface, database, games, communications, web apps, security and the list goes on. Unless you have created a program in one of these areas and have reviewed other people's code or had your code reviewed, how do you know that the code is actually good? Also, you can be good at working on small projects (lone programmer) but not be able to complete a very large project (i.e. within a team of more than 50 people) and the opposite might be equally true. Good might mean getting something working really quick. For personal use, this is okay, but if it's a commercial application, it should be bug and crash free code. There's also an issue of creating lots of working code versus code that has to be re-used and maintained. Anyways, my original point is what does good exactly mean?

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                                • M micmanos

                                  You're right, my apologies, allow me to better rephrase that .. Some programmers who could perform 'Profitably' with their skills have a hard time keeping a job because they try to market their theoretic potential instead of their actual skills. From a Bosses point of view that's just wrong because the JOB of a programmer doesn't lie within the boundaries of experimentation and learning. That's just my point though, nobody has to agree with that ... :|

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                                  keozcigisoft
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #78

                                  I absolutelly agree with that for bosses is only money and more money no matter how you get the work done if the code is a piece-of-crap-unmaintainable-non-future-proof-non-modular-non-scalable or if its the most beautiful and reusable code and scalable and maintainable its the same for them but i think it's very worth investing in experimentation and learning, better trained programmers do better software in less time but no one is wiling to invest on it, look at Microsoft or big companies investing in research that will lead eventually to better and best selling software

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                                  • P patbob

                                    The distractionless environment (e.g. unemployed) might help them concentrate and create great things, but it won't make a mediocre programmer a good one.

                                    patbob

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                                    K Offline
                                    keozcigisoft
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #79

                                    patbob wrote:

                                    The distractionless environment (e.g. unemployed) might help them concentrate and create great things, but it won't make a mediocre programmer a good one.

                                    exactly

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                                    • H Henry Minute

                                      Mustafa Ismail Mustafa wrote:

                                      its a sad day when we can't tell what separates this from that.

                                      er... from? There you can have a happy day now. :-D

                                      Henry Minute Do not read medical books! You could die of a misprint. - Mark Twain Girl: (staring) "Why do you need an icy cucumber?" “I want to report a fraud. The government is lying to us all.”

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                                      G Offline
                                      goodideadave
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #80

                                      Ba-dum-bum! There you are, it looked like you needed a rimshot after that one.

                                      My other signature is witty and insightful.

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                                      • D devvvy

                                        sometimes i thought to myself, for one to be really good programmer, you need to be unemployed. To get away from daily fire fighting, the long hours, the politics. Is it true, best programmers are generally unemployed? (I know one thing they can't be behind bars)

                                        dev

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                                        N Offline
                                        nfiguer
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #81

                                        I can certainly understand why you make this assumption. The are those of us with rather programming skills advanced and complex and those of us that can put a screen or two together in order to call it an application or web site. For the most part I've noticed that anything related with computers takes time and effort. Not to mention the occasional ridiculous bug that keeps on appearing or X third-party tool that provokes a deployment error which requires spending more time on a forum trying to fix something that from the most part wasn't even your fault to begin with. On the other hand, from the most part, being employed means that you'll have a problem to solve, a goal to achieve. Sure with leisure time you might spent time learning a new language or keep more up to date with current stuff out there, or maybe even inventing that hot new product or new game everyone will go crazy about. ja!

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                                        • M MidwestLimey

                                          Hows about this twisted logic: If you're not good at marketing, you're not good at communicating. If you're not good at communicating, you're never going to understand the user. If you can't understand the user, you're not a very good programmer. Ergo, they're not good programmers.

                                          10110011001111101010101000001000001101001010001010100000100000101000001000111100010110001011001011

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                                          byff
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #82

                                          Marketing != communicating. There's overlap, sure, but marketing is such a special, niche skill that its practitioners often have to endure years of school in order to master it. Communication is key in many job skill sets, but marketing remains a fairly rare skill for all that.

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