@Darius.V has your boss commented on your productivity/performance, or are you just concerned for yourself? Are there any others on your team that you can ask for guidance?
@Ronny I am not sure what is "regression" or what do you mean by fucntion. Codeception tests I write in that way: do database inserts which are required to reproduce, call a method, for example POST to the API. Compare the response with expected data
@Tiffany - in this new company I work, I guess they said I do good. But in previous 2 companies they said I do too slow coding. But in this company I am afraid that they would not lie, to be nice at first months. In previous company first moths they also said I do good.
@Tiffany - and I am afraid to ask this - am I too slow, kind of like showing self doubts
Basically, I agree, it's to be expected that a certain amount of distraction will happen in a work day. Just as long as it's only lasting a few minutes, and then you're going back to work. I get distracted on a subject, and spend half an hour reading on it without realizing it.
If it's a software development company, there should be something in place to help you improve. Professional development for employees is important for any company.
This suggestion entirely depends on your company's political nature. If you work in a cutthroat environment, then ignore this suggestion. Sit with your boss, and discuss with him/her that you're feeling that you're weak in writing tests, and ask if there's any training you can receive that will help you improve in writing tests.
Again, it entirely depends on how your company's environment is. I work at a laid-back organization, so sitting with my supervisor and saying I need help in an area is recommended.
so, if you feel comfortable, talk with your boss and explain that you feel like you're writing your tests slowly, and if there are any tricks or ideas or training that you can receive to improve yourself
and ask him to hold on, while you write it down. If he's too impatient to let you take the time to write down everything he requests........ I don't know what to say.
yea, sometimes he stops a bit when I say I need to write it. It looks like he tells so quickly that I should remember, why I am writing. But there is so lot of information in that company that withot writing notes I would be dead
@Darius.V I'm the same way. I have ADHD and bipolar disorder, so I have terrible memory. If someone requests something of me, I HAVE to write it down, or I'll forget in two minutes.
the thing happens that he tels lot of sentences. lets say at the beggining I understand, then comes sentence which I do not understand but he continues talking , and then because I did not understnad that one sentence, the other following sentences are pointless. imo he should be sure that I understood what he said
before talking more
btw can this chat be read after some time or is deleted? for example in case my boss comes and reads it :)
You can open the webpage in Chrome or Firefox, put the webpage in its own window, then drag the window to the smallest possible width, which will switch to the phone screensize... you can use dev tools to figure out where the problem is
@Darius.V if you don't want the messages to be read, you can delete them, but you have a certain amount of time before they're deleted
The reason why I'm asking/suggesting, is you're stating issues I've gone through a few years ago. Your mental health is extremely important in being effective at your job. If you're constantly worrying about stuff, you won't be effective.
I'd just ask your boss to slow down when he's giving you instructions then. Explain to him that you need to write it all down or you won't remember everything. Ask questions. Be assertive.
but yea, I rememebre in previous companies when I had huge stress, then I felt really inefective. but in this company also when I do not understnad smth and boss is annoyed that I do not understand then I get stress and also harder to think
@Darius.V see, I get into a routine, and then I get bored with the routine, and then I have to "change it up" some how... completely ruining whatever progress I was making with that routine. It's frustrating.
@Darius.V for example: I follow a certain routine in the morning, and I do it for two weeks, I get to work on time so on and so on. A week later, I get bored with that routine, and instead sleep in later than I should. Just little things like that that mess me up, because I'll get bored with the same routine every morning. Again, I'm weird.
@Danack So here's the thing about that: I am coming to believe that the only way that anyone, anyone can truly understand this, is to go through the phase where they have it turned on it's head and come out the other side organically.
omg... one of the first projects I had to do here, my coding still wasn't stellar best, and I keep having to add to it... it is so spaghetti coded at this point..
I wanna go back and recode it up bcz each time I have to add something to it, it takes me a day to remember wtf I was doing, but 20 classes and 8 libraries later, forget it
works -- technically, yes. as long as the user doesn't refresh the page after they've submitted the application... I still need to figure out what to do about that.
the problem I'm encountering now, is since I did not properly integrate this into the vendor's code base as a "module," adding it to the back-end system to be used by our Financial Aid office is going to be a pain in the ass.
in my three years working here being that most my projects are in Java, I've developed a good set of libraries and structured myself that now when a project hits my desk it's normally back out the door in half the time or less and very structured
@Tiffany you can improve yourself by doing both. php for instance is a programming language strict enough to learn programming the proper way, js has no landmarks, as you are free to do anything with it you will inevitably write bad stuff. also your code is not very different from what we do. all the presentation, tying stuff together code looks like bad code. you should focus on the model only, for a solid grasp about oop
@Wes I'm trying to figure out ways where I can break it out into parts, where the presentation is separate from the business logic, but I don't know where to begin.
i'm not sure about the approach @Tiffany most of us started with grouping functions into classes. "domain objects" are often a good start, e.g. class Account, class User, class BlogPost, etc
@Wes We contracted a local business a few years back to custom write a CMS system for us. It's in a kind-of MVC format. The code I wrote is technically integrated into it, but not properly. The code base already has several "domain objects" but they're called "modules"
@Archer yeah, I thought he was leaving, so I said g'night. Then he edited his message :P
@Wes I'd like to split my code up into a controller, model, base and a view, but without sitting down and looking at the code overall, and making notes of what I could pull out into functions, I don't know where to begin.
@Wes The problem is, I need to write an interface for the financial aid office to export the information into an encrypted zip file, and it has to be integrated into our CMS back-end. In order for the CMS codebase to recognize it, I need to write it as a "module" which uses at least a model, base and view.