Coding : school vs real life
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Source: reddit.com http://i.imgur.com/Lus4Y.png[^]
Regards, Nish
My technology blog: voidnish.wordpress.com
And managements job to keep changing the colors!
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And managements job to keep changing the colors!
Mike Hankey wrote:
changing the colors!
...and the number of squares, and if we could just add and an extra side without changing the configuration of the other sides... :sigh:
It was broke, so I fixed it.
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Mike Hankey wrote:
changing the colors!
...and the number of squares, and if we could just add and an extra side without changing the configuration of the other sides... :sigh:
It was broke, so I fixed it.
:laugh: Been there eh? Me too!
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And managements job to keep changing the colors!
That isn't in the requirement spec. It is a change record. More money !!! cost of paint extra
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Source: reddit.com http://i.imgur.com/Lus4Y.png[^]
Regards, Nish
My technology blog: voidnish.wordpress.com
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Source: reddit.com http://i.imgur.com/Lus4Y.png[^]
Regards, Nish
My technology blog: voidnish.wordpress.com
My observation: Academic projects look like the top image, while real-world projects often end up like the bottom one. Academic developers, professors and grad students, code like the bottom image, while professional developers code like the top image. I've done consulting work for a couple colleges. I was tempted to call out the local haz-mat team to clean up their code, it stank so badly.
Software Zen:
delete this;
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And in VB you'd just dump a bucket of red paint on it. :)
Curvature of the Mind now with 3D
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Mike Hankey wrote:
changing the colors!
...and the number of squares, and if we could just add and an extra side without changing the configuration of the other sides... :sigh:
It was broke, so I fixed it.
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And managements job to keep changing the colors!
Management's -job- is to keep you focused on red while the business keeps changing the colors. (... Because red is what his boss likes :p)
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My observation: Academic projects look like the top image, while real-world projects often end up like the bottom one. Academic developers, professors and grad students, code like the bottom image, while professional developers code like the top image. I've done consulting work for a couple colleges. I was tempted to call out the local haz-mat team to clean up their code, it stank so badly.
Software Zen:
delete this;
When I saw this thread title, my first thought was: to simulate the real world with an academic project, cut the due date in half, and have 3 other assignments due on that same date. Oh - and one of those 3 assignments is to finish the homework of the guy who dropped the class after the first week. To simulate a project manager, remove every 5th word of the assignment description. If you call your instructor for clarity remove 3 more words. To simulate a tight budget, delete your teacher's email address and phone number. (This simulates the business decision to save money on a project by cutting support and training.) To simulate a marketing meeting, roll a pair of dice. The number that comes up is the number of times you will have to change your clothes while coding. Throw old clothes in a pile on the floor. You don't have time to clean them up
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When I saw this thread title, my first thought was: to simulate the real world with an academic project, cut the due date in half, and have 3 other assignments due on that same date. Oh - and one of those 3 assignments is to finish the homework of the guy who dropped the class after the first week. To simulate a project manager, remove every 5th word of the assignment description. If you call your instructor for clarity remove 3 more words. To simulate a tight budget, delete your teacher's email address and phone number. (This simulates the business decision to save money on a project by cutting support and training.) To simulate a marketing meeting, roll a pair of dice. The number that comes up is the number of times you will have to change your clothes while coding. Throw old clothes in a pile on the floor. You don't have time to clean them up
You forgot the part where the assignment radically changes one week before its due!
ICP-Fan (The Keyboard Wielding Maniac)
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When I saw this thread title, my first thought was: to simulate the real world with an academic project, cut the due date in half, and have 3 other assignments due on that same date. Oh - and one of those 3 assignments is to finish the homework of the guy who dropped the class after the first week. To simulate a project manager, remove every 5th word of the assignment description. If you call your instructor for clarity remove 3 more words. To simulate a tight budget, delete your teacher's email address and phone number. (This simulates the business decision to save money on a project by cutting support and training.) To simulate a marketing meeting, roll a pair of dice. The number that comes up is the number of times you will have to change your clothes while coding. Throw old clothes in a pile on the floor. You don't have time to clean them up
DnD for programmers? Dungeon = project, Dragons = management.
He who asks a question is a fool for five minutes. He who does not ask a question remains a fool forever. [Chineese Proverb] Jonathan C Dickinson (C# Software Engineer)
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Source: reddit.com http://i.imgur.com/Lus4Y.png[^]
Regards, Nish
My technology blog: voidnish.wordpress.com
And it takes a while until the "college" inside of you lets it go and accept the truth. One of the best visual metaphors for the sad reality of our day to day predicament. ======================================================= If "hard coding" would only mean that someone is coding hard.
giuchici
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And managements job to keep changing the colors!
So true, I've looked over many programs in my career and some were like looking through layers of paint. My company has acquired customers from another company that was going out of business and we had to convert their data. The IT person I talked to at that company characterized their code as layers of paint. Looking at their database structures, my reading between the lines of why they were going out of business was because they had modified their code so much that flexibility resembled concrete instead of putty.
Psychosis at 10 Film at 11 Those who do not remember the past, are doomed to repeat it. Those who do not remember the past, cannot build upon it.
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lol.. Oh and btw, did we mention that you only have a day to have it developed, tested, published and the documentation written?
JTWhit wrote:
Oh and btw, did we mention that you only have a day to have it developed, tested, published and the documentation written?
And, if the deadline is too tight, skip the testing and documentation; as did the person who made the original application whose code you will be modifying.
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So true, I've looked over many programs in my career and some were like looking through layers of paint. My company has acquired customers from another company that was going out of business and we had to convert their data. The IT person I talked to at that company characterized their code as layers of paint. Looking at their database structures, my reading between the lines of why they were going out of business was because they had modified their code so much that flexibility resembled concrete instead of putty.
Psychosis at 10 Film at 11 Those who do not remember the past, are doomed to repeat it. Those who do not remember the past, cannot build upon it.
The last company I worked for had a LOP (Lipstick On a Pig) release of their software.
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My observation: Academic projects look like the top image, while real-world projects often end up like the bottom one. Academic developers, professors and grad students, code like the bottom image, while professional developers code like the top image. I've done consulting work for a couple colleges. I was tempted to call out the local haz-mat team to clean up their code, it stank so badly.
Software Zen:
delete this;
Gary Wheeler wrote:
I've done consulting work for a couple colleges. I was tempted to call out the local haz-mat team to clean up their code, it stank so badly.
*nods* The importance of having your code work is directly proportional to how likely it is that you will be the one present when the paint gets scratched, the software cattle stampede because they see the wrong color, flattening enough crops that someone will have to starve this winter, and guess who that's gonna be? If you won't be there to suffer the consequences, or don't have sufficient risk to yourself to care about the consequences, then (with apologies to Mr. Johnson and his Boswell) it defocuses the mind wonderfully away from coding as if your job depended on it.
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You forgot the part where the assignment radically changes one week before its due!
ICP-Fan (The Keyboard Wielding Maniac)
Maybe you were lucky in college, but most of my experience was that -- the teacher couldn't make the assignments dumb enough, and kept changing them. It was worse in the intro classes, which I wasn't allowed to test out of because the CS department didn't believe in letting people do that. As for Gary's comment about coding, that's because CS grad students don't know how to program. They're all about lofty ideas and masters/doctorate degrees, not about learning skills.
We can program with only 1's, but if all you've got are zeros, you've got nothing.
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And managements job to keep changing the colors!
Management: "Start coding, we'll go find out what the client wants."
Those aren't bugs, they're randomly generated features. Start programming while we go find out what the client wants.
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Management: "Start coding, we'll go find out what the client wants."
Those aren't bugs, they're randomly generated features. Start programming while we go find out what the client wants.
Truer words were never uttered. I had a project manager ask me to bid a job one time so I did and he came back in a couple of days and told me we got the job but that the hours to do it were 1/2 of what I bid. I told him that it was going to take the hours I bid and he said "...that's OK we'll finish it at customers site and charge the s**t out of them...". They did and made enough on the job that they flew my ex-wife to Brownsville, TX during xmas to be with me for a week.