@RoelvanUden I like it though. That way I can show myself I actually know something rather than thinking I know something. Not that a certificate proves you are the best, but it shows a modicum of competence.
Sure, no problem. It proves a certain minimum knowledge for sure. But the same principle applies on formal education (Universities etc). It only proves a minimum, and entire industries require them, but a real programmer can be a 13-year old kid that just loves programming; no education/certificates required.
Don't complain about not having time if it's just a matter of your priorities being elsewhere. You do have the time, you're just not prioritizing programming in that time. Mystery solved!
When you don't have the ability to show body language, you should consider how people will react to what you write. It's a denotation/connotation thingy.
Semiotics (also called semiotic studies; not to be confused with the Saussurean tradition called semiology) is the study of meaning-making, the philosophical theory of signs and symbols. This includes the study of signs and sign processes (semiosis), indication, designation, likeness, analogy, metaphor, symbolism, signification, and communication. Semiotics is closely related to the field of linguistics, which, for its part, studies the structure and meaning of language more specifically. The Semiotic Tradition explores the study of signs and symbols as a significant part of communications. As...
@Sippy I think that says more about the person who reads it like that. I read it as, "is it worth putting in 3 years of your life for a badge on a random website?"
@Sippy Also, that isn't a great way to be and stay happy though. Most people say / write things every once in a while that could be worded better. Is that worth getting upset for?
USE [Production] UPDATE Employees SET JobTitle = REPLACE(JobTitle, 'Programmer', 'Brogrammer') GO UPDATE Employees SET JobTitle = REPLACE(JobTitle, 'Developer', 'Devloper') GO -- I wonder how long it takes my co-workers to notice
@Sippy - I was kidding though, SQL injection is large problem. Luckily most people use a framework to parameterize and whitelist their sql (such as EF).
A question if I may (as it's off topic). I have a VPS, with a few websites - the websites are usually 5 or 6 static pages - no search functinality, no database back end, no shopping card, no log in - just an online, flat brochure. Each website though, according to task manager, takes about 30mb - does any one have an opinion if this is right?
Static meaning no backend to drive anything so they could be simple HTML :( Bad choiec of words.. :( --- Right, I see... OK, so 30mb isn't unrealstic then? Thank you @TravisJ
he he, Yes, I know... But it was the easiest way to get used to working with them/understanding it's requirements/razor syntax... I have 2 or 3 sites which are with a database backend, and they take up to 150mb!! :(
ah, cool... Hmmmm, maybe 10 sites though with 1GB ram isn't too good then (with SQL as well)... It is eating it up quick! How brilliant to know, thank you so much @TravisJ for talking to me
bye all... have good mornings/afternoons/evenings/nights/other
"trying to create a directory and, if it doesn’t exist, catching all sorts of exceptions that can occur in the process, showing a warning to the user, then writing to the nonexistent directory anyway "