nedkelly123 wrote: » its very lucrative.. if you are good and talented ,engage in community etc ,you could expect 70 k after 5 years more if you go contracting .. i have friends getting 450 per day .. with no shortage of work im daily rate in a place the last 7 years on 370 per day..prob could get more elsewhere but i like it here
OMM 0000 wrote: » You can absolutely get a junior job via one of those bootcamps if you have a portfolio and a naive/desperate employer. I know many of these guys who now work as programmers. They are all crap though. You'll notice they use MongoDB for everything, even though it should really only be used as a bucket for non-relational data. The problem is they don't understand the fundamentals. A computer science degree teaches you these fundamentals.
Oranage2 wrote: » There are so many great developers who have arts, statistics, business degrees. A computer science degree isn't the be all and end all to getting a job in software. In fact I know some guys that have a CS degrees that aren't great programmers.
OMM 0000 wrote: » These people have an aptitude for it. They're rare. Just like many (most) computer science graduates aren't good programmers. The best programmer I know didn't even go to college. But the problem with these bootcamps if they fool their graduates into thinking they are competent, when in fact they know almost nothing. Being a good programmer requires a large amount of knowledge, continuous learning, striving for continuous improvements, an aptitude for it, and a passion for it.
kingbhome wrote: » How long does it take to get the qualifications needed for a salary like this. Is the 5 years you mentioned after the degree or this length of time to get it.
OMM 0000 wrote: » These people have an aptitude for it. They're rare.
OMM 0000 wrote: » They are all crap though. You'll notice they use MongoDB for everything, even though it should really only be used as a bucket for non-relational data. The problem is they don't understand the fundamentals. A computer science degree teaches you these fundamentals.
Oranage2 wrote: » I was letting the op know that there are many alternative ways to get into software other than a CS degree but many insisted it was rubbish and if only a degree from MIT was good enough.
beauf wrote: » There is a world of difference in recording the odd macro and programming.
beauf wrote: » But there is a element of snobbery about it, and its become a barrier to entry in lots of area's.
beauf wrote: » That said you do meet CS Programmers who really are not very good, and even the good ones make common sense errors due to their own Narcissism.
salonfire wrote: » And yet the average office clerk, who has no more interest in programming than the man on the moon , has the "aptitude" to write macro programs or to automate tasks. How is that possible if it the aptitude do be able to do it is so "rare"? Could the average office clerk do a bit of tinkering in brain surgery on the side you think? Tinker in industrial chemistry? I have pulled you up on your constant negativity on this topic before.
salonfire wrote: » If I am frontend developer, why do I care what the database is? If the wrong database is used, is not normalized correctly, missing indexes, not my problem. It is up to the DBA or backend team. So what if the developer does not have a understanding of the fundamentals if they don't work on backend.
salonfire wrote: » I agree, but my point is anybody can pickup the very basics. So someone looking to build a career needs to work from there.
OMM 0000 wrote: » You have no understanding of programming.
OMM 0000 wrote: » Stop pretending you're a frontend developer. You're not.
salonfire wrote: » If I am frontend developer,
OMM 0000 wrote: » You also admitted your only "experience" is writing some macros for Excel to automate some tasks.
OMM 0000 wrote: » As I told you before, writing macros for Excel is completely different to development and the two should not be compared.
OMM 0000 wrote: » Computer science has the highest drop out rate of any course. It's because of programming. Most people cannot do it.
OMM 0000 wrote: » I don't understand what's going on with you.
salonfire wrote: » You come into all of these threads espousing how fantastic and exceptional you need to be to work as a developer.
beauf wrote: » You should check out the OP history of thread starting, if you think think this was a genuine query. Multi-posting is a friend of no-one.
OMM 0000 wrote: » salonfire, here's some of your previous insights into programming: * any idiot can get a job as a software developer, even from just reading "Javascript in 24 Hours" * writing financial software only requires basic software development skills * people from non-IT backgrounds can become developers relatively quickly * a basic understanding of classes, entities and relationships is all you need to be a developer * design patterns are only for cutting edge developers You are free to continue giving your stupid opinion on this topic.
OMM 0000 wrote: » Obviously there are all sorts of exceptions.
Some 62.6 percent of the 44,636 developers who responded to Stack Overflow’s question about education said that they had majored in computer science, computer engineering, or software engineering. Another 9.3 percent had majored in another engineering discipline (i.e., mechanical, electrical, etc.). In third place, some 7.9 percent said they had majored in information systems, information technology, or system administration.
What can we conclude from this data? Roughly three-quarters of developers have the equivalent of a bachelor’s degree or higher, and nearly as many (72 percent) earned that degree in their computer science, computer/software engineering, or another engineering field). Moreover, some 85 percent of respondents felt that a formal education is at least somewhat important; in the notes accompanying the survey data, Stack Overflow noted that this sentiment “is contrary to the popular idiom that you don’t need formal education to become a developer.”
mr_fegelien wrote: » No, this time I really am genuine. I've been given an ultimatum by parents. Either do this course or get out of the house.
salonfire wrote: » All true
Deleted User wrote: » Well to be fair, those are all true.
OMM 0000 wrote: » They're not true. Let's just take this one as an example: * a basic understanding of classes, entities and relationships is all you need to be a developer It doesn't even make sense.
Deleted User wrote: » Which is partly why there are so many bad developers around. Present company excepted of course.
OMM 0000 wrote: » I stay in my lane. Maybe you should too?