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good programmer

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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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    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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    • 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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      byff
      wrote on last edited by
      #83

      It would be more accurate to say "if they KNOW you're good, you will be in demand." Nonetheless, there are dozens of reasons why you wouldn't necessarily be in demand despite a killer skill set, most of which boil down to personal incompatibility between yourself and, say, former employers. Word of mouth relies on much more than just the quality of your own work. So does formal marketing.

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      • G Gary R Wheeler

        Mustafa Ismail Mustafa wrote:

        I take pride in being an Engineer

        That's probably one of the most important aspects of the whole idea. It's the notion that engineering is a discipline that you apply to create work that meets a set of standards. When you do that well, you feel pride in the result.

        Mustafa Ismail Mustafa wrote:

        when the midden heap hits the windmill

        I like that variant on the phrase :-D. Gives things a nice sense of scale :laugh:.

        Software Zen: delete this;
        Fold With Us![^]

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        Mustafa Ismail Mustafa
        wrote on last edited by
        #84

        Gary R. Wheeler wrote:

        That's probably one of the most important aspects of the whole idea. It's the notion that engineering is a discipline that you apply to create work that meets a set of standards. When you do that well, you feel pride in the result.

        Engineering, is a disciplined, scientific methodology. I've known Surgeons who were great Engineers in the way they actually perform their operations.

        Gary R. Wheeler wrote:

        I like that variant on the phrase Big Grin. Gives things a nice sense of scale Laugh.

        Why thank you! But I'm sorry Gary, I can't take credit for it. Its Terry Pratchett :)

        If the post was helpful, please vote! Current activities: Book: The Fifth Elephant by Terry Pratchett Project: Hospital Automation, final stage Learning: Image analysis, LINQ Now and forever, defiant to the end. What is Multiple Sclerosis[^]?

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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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          CDMTJX
          wrote on last edited by
          #85

          This depends on your definition of "good". Programming all too often involves hours, firefighting and politics. You're not a corporate creature if you don't do any of them. Are you a programmer if you go up on a mountaintop and somehow program without the rest of the world to bother you? To me a good programmer is able to deal with varying situations, adapt to what's going on, learn new programming languages, play nice with other people, etc, all to get a programming task done. Being paid is definitely a good thing.

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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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            cpkilekofp
            wrote on last edited by
            #86

            Marketing and communicating are NOT identical. I'm very effective at communicating with business people...but selling myself is difficult. I'm hypercritical of myself, and often understate my capabilities because my own measure of them is lower than what my customer might think of them. I'm not alone in this, either - I've met a number of very capable software developers who (like me) are not successful in marketing themselves.

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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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              cpkilekofp
              wrote on last edited by
              #87

              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.

              Amen to this. This is why I endure a nearly 100-mile round-trip commute each day and dismiss other job opportunities, because my manager does just that, as well as presenting me with some of the most sweetly difficult problems you could ask for just often enough to keep me pushed to BE good.

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              • M Mustafa Ismail Mustafa

                Gary R. Wheeler wrote:

                That's probably one of the most important aspects of the whole idea. It's the notion that engineering is a discipline that you apply to create work that meets a set of standards. When you do that well, you feel pride in the result.

                Engineering, is a disciplined, scientific methodology. I've known Surgeons who were great Engineers in the way they actually perform their operations.

                Gary R. Wheeler wrote:

                I like that variant on the phrase Big Grin. Gives things a nice sense of scale Laugh.

                Why thank you! But I'm sorry Gary, I can't take credit for it. Its Terry Pratchett :)

                If the post was helpful, please vote! Current activities: Book: The Fifth Elephant by Terry Pratchett Project: Hospital Automation, final stage Learning: Image analysis, LINQ Now and forever, defiant to the end. What is Multiple Sclerosis[^]?

                G Offline
                G Offline
                Gary R Wheeler
                wrote on last edited by
                #88

                Mustafa Ismail Mustafa wrote:

                I've known Surgeons who were great Engineers

                My daughter's kindergarten teacher was an "educational engineer". The lady was amazing. She could treat every kid as an individual. You could see her evaluating and balancing what she was doing against the results she was getting. I'm also convinced she was the world's first quad-core human, because she could multi-task like nobody's business!

                Software Zen: delete this;
                Fold With Us![^]

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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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                  B Offline
                  BlueGm
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #89

                  It seems to me that most of this discussion didn't address the original question, roughly paraphrased as "do you need to be unemployed to be a really good programmer?" The reasons cited being to get away from the various problems that come with having a job and working with other people. Of course, it might help if we had an idea of what was meant by "a really good programmer." That being said, to my mind, you can't be a really good programmer if it isn't a vocation for you, your primary occupation, the way you answer the question of what you do, and what you are passionate about. As to whether or not that is a job and/or your primary source of income is another story. As for a job, I think its common sense that whether it contributes or detracts to that varies from job to job with too many specifics to give a general answer. For a positive example, at the job where I am currently working it is just me and one other developer and I was forced to learn many new things and develop new techniques and a new understanding of programming that, despite having programmed professionally before, I had never previously developed. Now that I don't know that I'm a "really good programmer," but certainly having a job has moved me in that direction, whereas all the free time in the world before that (I was unemployed for several years before that, and programming applications with the intent to sell) did not. As for a negative real life example, I don't yet have one, but it seems to me that it is possible to get pigeon holed and never develop any new skills. This, of course, is eventually a death sentence in the IT field, which I've seen happen to administrators, but haven't yet had the experience of seeing it happen to a 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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                    Plamen Dragiyski
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #90

                    Well, it is simple. Let make a competition... I'll give a task to "best unemployed programmer" and to a software development company. If "best unemployed programmer" complete my task before the company, I'll admit that unemployed programmer are the best. In our country we have proverb: "Two heads think better than one!".

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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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                      Y Offline
                      yeskele
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #91

                      a programmer without business logic know how can not be called a 'good' programmer

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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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                        Donkey Master
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #92

                        MidwestLimey wrote:

                        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.

                        I disagree. The OP said programmer, didn't say software engineer. It doesn't take good communication skills to do grunt work. Your project manager will do that part of the job for you. Disclaimer: I do believe that a programmer who understands the user is always superior to one who doesn't. Being good at marketing your skills is not the same as being good at communication. You can work in a university, understand what they talk about, and their needs, but still feel uncomfortable around people and be bad in a job interview. I'd say that if a good programmer doesn't have a job, it means he's not a good programmer (overestimates himself), or he's not trying hard enough, because there are, in this world, a few competent recruiters, who can recognize good programmers and wouldn't let one run if one crossed his sight.

                        "Computer Science is no more about computers than astronomy is about telescopes." - Edsger Dijkstra

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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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                          445363200
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #93

                          haha, admire your logic.

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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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                            A Offline
                            A Q Ghouri
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #94

                            Good Programmers ... Well if unfortuanitly unemployeed.. they can earn as much as they can... just need a active brain and PR.... he can earn alot

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