WhiteMemento9 wrote: » It highly depends on the job but in many cases, the way Software Development has gone sucks the life out of any enjoyment. Sprints, constant meetings, deadlines, testing, the constant need for the business to quantify work done so always trying to find better and better ways to track and quantify work. It doesn't feel as creative or enjoyable when all those get thrown in the mix.https://medium.com/@melissamcewen/i-just-dont-want-to-be-a-software-developer-anymore-a371422069a1
28064212 wrote: » Define "critical thinking ability"? Regardless, the answer will be no. Some coding tasks challenge critical thinking ability. Some mathematical tasks challenge critical thinking ability. Some literature, art, physics, accounting... tasks challenge critical thinking ability.
DublinWriter wrote: » By wary of hooking your IT career to one particular-star, especially Microsoft. They are the most faddish of the lot when it comes to proffering the framework de-jour, then dropping it for another.
John_Mc wrote: » They announced Silverlight was going to be discontinued but it's still going.
seamus wrote: » Tbh, you'd be silly hitching your wagon to almost anything these days. Within a decade there'll be a new framework that does things faster and better and more integrated with the cloud of the day. It's one thing to spend 99% of your day coding C# or Java, but if that's all you can see yourself doing until you retire, then the amount of job opportunities will start drying up. Being a polyglot these days is of considerable value. An expert C++ coder can learn to write any other language to a very high level inside of 3 months. The difference is in how different types of code build, interact with libraries, interact with SDKs and frameworks. Someone with a mid-level exposure to five languages will be able to make a better informed decision about the best way to approach a problem. Someone with only one language will always try to solve problems in that language.
Mitchell Delicious Ivy wrote: » I've read becoming proficient in a coding language is not dissimilar to a verbal language in terms of approach, difficultly, and time to proficiency. Would you agree with this? Would you liken your bolded text to proficiency in five spoken languages in any respect?
Mitchell Delicious Ivy wrote: » I've read becoming proficient in a coding language is not dissimilar to a verbal language in terms of approach, difficultly, and time to proficiency.
DublinWriter wrote: » These days it's all about all the framework, not the language.
Do coders love coding?
DublinWriter wrote: » Considering there's no support for it with Edge, Chrome and Firefox, you'd be crazy to have anything in production now using it.
jmcc wrote: » The technical term for that is "bollox". Human languages don't require a knowledge of algorithms and other aspects such as computability and problem solving. A coding language's use is in getting hardware or other software to do what you want it to do. It could be argued that human languages are about getting wetware to do what you want but unlike coding, human languages generally involve a two, or more, way flow of information which all parties have to process. It is not uncommon for those from an Arts background doing a one year wonder course to try to extrapolate their previous knowledge of human languages to coding but the reality is that coding, at its core, is Mathematics. Being able to think in a coding language is very different from being able to think in a human language. Regards...jmcc
antimatterx wrote: » I ****ing love it. I don't know how to explain it, but the feeling of solving a problem is equal to getting high. I'm a frontend dev for the last 8 months, having been a PHP backend dev for the first 9 months of my career. Dare I say it, frontend is more fulfilling and challenging then backend was.
Mitchell Delicious Ivy wrote: » What language? What undergrad course did you do?
John_Mc wrote: » I think you were just bashing Microsoft for the sake of it.
Mitchell Delicious Ivy wrote: » I understand what you're saying, but it always struck me like there was a memorization aspect to certain lines and expressions that wasn't dissimilar from memorization of verbal language vocabulary.
DublinWriter wrote: » SQL Server is a joke compared to Oracle in terms of scalability and transaction management
TuringBot47 wrote: » Yeah, it's a toy database and was never considered a tier 1 supported database in any enterprise level software house I worked in.