I recently posted an answer to this question, and was dismayed to see that the asker accepted an answer that was (in my opinion) plain wrong. Briefly put, the question was asking whether SQL Server needed to be installed if an application was written to use it, and the accepted answer started wit...
but since I started I've basically convinced them to use SourceTree because a) Microsoft's Git implementation under TFS isn't finished and requires some annoying workarounds, and b) people were doing it so wrong that I liked the idea of SourceTree's magical one-click git-flow button to make it idiot-proof
there are branches with more recent commits that were branched from master aaaages back and haven't been merged in either direction since, and there are branches that were merged but not closed, some of which were then worked on again...
there are commits tagged as "release vX.Y.Z" but when you checkout that commit, it doesn't compile...
there's even a project where you have to check out two repositories and put them in folders with specific names because the application actually spreads source files across both repos
temp contractors; they see no reason to change how they work to match our practices when a few months from now they'll be at a different company with different practices
yeah
on the bright side, the company is phasing out all the temps and replacing them with permanent contract devs like me
I was the first; a good friend of mine started the same day as me, there's been a couple more since
and all the permanent devs are on board with the "doing things properly" concept, so in a month or two when all the temps are gone it'll get better
we have a load of venues around the country, and the staff there use iPods and iPhones, usually with the cases that have the integrated card readers and barcode scanners
so we write the apps that let them use those for customer transaction processing, stock take, and a load of stuff like that
usually a fairly thin mobile app written in C# using the Xamarin stuff to deploy to iOS, and then all the heavy lifting is done by server-side stuff using ASP.NET MVC and WebAPI
Well I'm still learning C# atm, I've got a couple years xp, but still. I mainly write open source stuff in C# too. Normally WPF, sometimes WinForms though.
Atm, I'm working on a music enhancement desktop app.
I had zero experience; I'd been intending to go into aerospace engineering for years, but I got partway through the course and discovered I was terrible at structural mechanics
along the way I'd discovered I was good with computers, so I switched
so I didn't even do GCSE IT
I started my degree with a semester of basic MATLAB tuition, and about six or seven hours of looking at C++ in my spare time
the course taught me C++, I learned C# with a society for an XNA games programming competition, and it all went from there
and then I phoned the halls on the Thursday, got the application for that night and emailed it back the next day (Friday), and moved in on the Saturday
they hadn't actually processed it yet, so I just stood in the lobby and watched as they finished my paperwork
I've landed a job, and the team is changing over here so in two months I've had way more say in process changes than you'd expect because there's basically just two of us left who have the level of tech knowledge to make certain calls, and we agree with each other
so when I told myself a few months back that within two years I wanted to have enough seniority to dictate my own workflow... yeah, at this rate that'll happen inside six months
well... I enjoy actually writing code way too much to get a job where I manage people
I'm quite happy to be told "go build a Thing", as long as I can decide how to build the Thing
someone else can decide what the Thing is, that's fine, but I like having control over my workflow
so the source control stuff we're doing at the moment, the doc I wrote yesterday specifying what we use version numbers for (because they were wildly inconsistent before), that sort of stuff
beyond that... no plans, really, besides getting better at what I do so that I can be paid more for doing it