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00:37
posted on January 02, 2021 by Herb Sutter

As WG21 continues work on contracts, I thought I’d join other WG21ers like Andrzej Krzemieński who are writing ‘explainer’ blog posts about various considerations related to contracts, and to draw attention to the existing work and papers like P0542. Assertions have been a foundational tool for writing understandable computer code since we could write computer … Continue reading GotW #97:

01:04
NSW records seven new cases as masks mandated
Talking about nazi government.
user7659542
At least they are cautious
Less than 0.001% people infected, and they mandate masks. Maybe they should stop all the cars because there is a higher chance for car accidents.
user7659542
The proliferation with the new virus mutation is crazy apparently...
Oh, but foreigners from highly infected areas can still visit Sydney for variety of reasons.
Cave in on stupidity.
No wonder everyone who came to the open house wore a mask. As a host, I was the only one without one because I didn't know.
But news says that it's from tomorrow. Maybe I should go shopping today before I have to wear a mask.
user7659542
01:42
@TelKitty is "to hamster" a verb in English?
user7659542
In my native language they came up with that verb to designate people who go shopping and buy loads of food because they are afraid they might run out of food due to covid
user7659542
They buy so much food there is none left for other people
02:06
@traducerad 'Hoarding' is the word. I am not hoarding, I just don't want to be a lamb.
 
4 hours later…
05:44
@traducerad These people squirrel away food.
06:12
@Mikhail ...and (the one I found entertaining) toilet tissue.
 
1 hour later…
07:27
Toilet tissue solves toilet issue.
 
1 hour later…
08:46
Why is mandate mask wearing when only 7 people infested in a state with more than 7 million people not a violation of human rights?
I wonder if it's test to see whether we would obey any stupid rules. Also I wonder whether it's a way for state revenue to raise money - by giving out fines.
After all the credit rating of the state I am in was downgraded because it spent too much money. Devious way the state uses to raise fund.
 
10 hours later…
18:46
Hi, wow, familiar faces here!
Why are there still so many homework questions now that everyone's semester should be over? I guess people also bring stuff to SO from self-paced learning…
@Potatoswatter hi
long time no see
I got et by a corporate masheen
 
1 hour later…
user7659542
20:02
I discovered a new "business model". Many companies don't have the in house-knowledge to develop hardware, especially once you start with complex designs using high-frequency stuff etc...
Therefor many of them outsource the hardware development, by providing a list of specifications. It is even more funny now because I just realized it is only one single firm who does all the hardware designs for
user7659542
all of the aerospace and defence companies. The dude has a PhD in electronics, is in his mid 50s nowadays and started all on his own. Nowadays he has built a respectable firm and employs quite some engineers. And things are going quite well for him apparently: he is driving a Ferrari
user7659542
Unlike many other people (regular employees or freelancers) who have to go on site. He is just given an entire part of a project. He in some sense has an ownership on that project, because his client has no real in-dept view on how things go inside his company. He just makes sure his design works and complies with the requirements he was given
New business model = build expertise, outgrow your management but also learn to outsmart them, market yourself as a consultant?
That sounds like the oldest business model in engineering.
user7659542
Maybe something similar could be done in the field of software. Maybe something like: providing custom kernels or operating systems? Don't know....
The problem with software engineering is that management seldom knows how to deal with specifications.
user7659542
20:07
The tricky part here is that software very often is strongly tied to the in-house knowledge of the client himsels. Eg: I don t see boeing getting in touch with such a company asking them to build a flight controller, because they would rather want to keep all that knowledge in house and have full control over it
user7659542
@Potatoswatter This is much more than just consultancy. That dude is not alone any more. He is given entire projects and has teams of engineers building the project.
user7659542
@Potatoswatter As a consultant you typically go on site and collaborate with employees from there. This here is quite different
user7659542
This is more about outsourcing than getting support from just a consultant
user7659542
@Potatoswatter Does not mean it is impossible to apply the same approach for software. I run a company and managed to get this once.
user7659542
It was not as extreme as the dude I m speaking about, but goes in the same direction
20:12
@traducerad Having control over the knowledge means having a solid handle on all the problems being solved simultaneously, i.e. complete specs tied together by a mathematical model. Boeing lost control of their software validation process and now they're losing the trust of their customers. They're not going to start outsourcing stuff, but rather everyone can tell they're in deep doodoo because they're unprepared for having lost their lead.
user7659542
@Potatoswatter I d like to point out that, to me, it looks like your statement here does not invalidate what I said
hello can anyone tell me how to overcome this bug.. basically I am reading from stdin and output to stdout. Now there are two functions which are doing this. When i do this in console, the first function does not complete its reading and writing and second function interferes, although they are completely separate
@traducerad It's hard to generalize over all software, or all management. But software tends to have more variables than electronic or mechanical devices. Software comprises the part of a product's design which explicitly deals with lots of variables in the abstract.
what is the cause of this
@jeea Have you tried isolating the functions so they mutually exclusive streams? Don't use stdin for both functions. Or, try asking on the site stackoverflow.com, because we don't give sensible answers in this room.
user7659542
20:21
@Potatoswatter still does not mean it is not doable. You could offer to develop their software in multiple stages and at every stage they can update their requirements and pay.
@traducerad Where did I ever say anything was impossible?
user7659542
@Potatoswatter to me it lookED like you implied it by saying softtware has much more variables.
user7659542

C++ Questions and Answers

Solve problems and approach solutions. Just ask and lurkers wi...
I'm pleased to meet you, and by way of introduction, let me say that my pessimism extends to assertions over impossibility.
ok, the thing is actually
for (LL i = 0; i < n-1; i += 2) {
solve4(0, i);
}
sorry, this solve4 is working on different i, and they are interfering
20:23
@jeea, we don't answer questions here, at least not helpfully. Your posts are destined for a bitbucket.
ok I move there
user7659542
I think a solution may be to find a specialized field in software where you can apply such a business model. OS development looks like a possibility at firrst sight. I have worked with many clients and every time they were lacking knowledge on OS dev and often only had one single guy who had some knowledge about it and could dabble a bit in Yocto or buildroot
user7659542
no real expertise
user7659542
There are probably other fields where this is applicable too. I d need to think a bit more...
@traducerad What I'm saying is that the business model you mention (which is known as consulting) depends on managers, who have identified a business opportunity, to have a handle on the deliverable artifacts they need to secure profits.
The less the managers understand, the more likely they are to get bamboozled.
user7659542
20:32
@Potatoswatter I dont know how consultancy works in the US. But this is typically not how consultancy works as far as I have seen in Europe. Also you say that managers would use this to secure profits. I think this would not change anything to what I said, either way that would be good for me. Regardless of whether it is to "secure profit" or not
user7659542
@Potatoswatter Again, I am affraid I don t see how this relates to what I wrote above
Because there's always an incentive to market engineering services without the talent to back it up, by making the contract too flimsy.
user7659542
@Potatoswatter who cares whether the project manager understands or not? We just want clear specifications as input. If he specifies poorly we will help him to specify it better if he still bamboozles that s his problem not ours.
user7659542
@Potatoswatter true. But you are speaking about the clients incompetency, not "ours". If he is incompetent that s good for us, he will need us more and we will provide him with all the support he needs in exchange for payment -obviously-
That's assuming that you win the contract. It's hard to negotiate well with ignorance.
user7659542
20:36
@Potatoswatter hold my beer, watch and learn...
If you have already have connections to a customer, then go for it!
user7659542
@Potatoswatter I first need to build more knowledge when it comes to OS. I cannot allow myself to offer poor quality services
How much is enough?
user7659542
I nowadays typically get called to do software architecture stuff. And have configured various operating systems in the past + written drivers. But I dont feel confident enough tin those skills o say that I could offer such a service
user7659542
I can write embedded software and provide an acceptable architecture. But my OS level is not good enough. And I cannot market "embedded sw application dev" in the way I described above. They don't need expert knowledge for that
user7659542
20:40
@Potatoswatter Good question...
Are we talking about customized Linux, or the design space in between that nad a bare MCU without task management?
By the way, I'm an American but I'm in Europe for a few years already
user7659542
I mean that I nowadays write embedded software, regardless of whether it is with an OS or not. It could be firmware, application dev in userspace, anything really.
As for the service I am thinking about, I am thinking about trying to build an expertise in Yocto and buildroot
user7659542
The annoying this with Yocto and buildroot is that building an expertise in those areas is extremely time consuming and not so easy. But it is a double edged sword, because this also means I will have less competition.
user7659542
Another downside with OS dev, is that once the job is done they don't need you anymore. It is not like with website development that they have to keep paying you for maintainance.
Well, it depends on how the product evolves, right?
user7659542
20:51
@Potatoswatter true but, very often the product does not evolve in such a way that you have to do major modifications in the OS
user7659542
the application will change, be patched and upgraded. But the OS probably not that soon.
I'm not so familiar with embedded Linux. Do product developers really shop for the MCU and the OS separately? Or would you market the whole platform / work for the hardware vendor?
user7659542
@Potatoswatter Most clients I have worked with choose hardware and then develop a (custom) Yocto distro for it. So they typically don't have an all in one solution from the start
user7659542
custom for some of those people just means, putting "poky core-image-minimal" on it. That's it.
My only adventure in professional embedded development was in the less-than-Linux space.
The MCU vendor should give a bunch of drivers, and then you pick the ones you need and configure the memory map, … what's the tricky part?
user7659542
21:20
@Potatoswatter Not quite sure what you are asking here. It depends on multiple factors
Which factors are making you unwilling to start advertising yourself as an expert?
user7659542
21:35
I m not quite sure what you are insinuating. I am not an expert.

As for your memory mapping question it is not entirely clear whether you are speaking about eg a microcontroller or eg a full blown x86. In case of the former, I don't give a flying fuck about the vendor. You just write straight to the mcu's registers to drive the surrounding hardware. If you have to start from 0, there are multiple ways you can do that.
If however you are on something bigger like eg an x86. Then I just assume the driver is available as a device or I can modprobe/insmod it to have access to it under ./sys, /p
You were talking about engineering consultancy in the software domain, and then you said you could give it a try with a little more buildroot/yocto expertise.
user7659542
@Potatoswatter yes, and knowing how you integrate a driver statically in a kernel is part of the yocto/br expertise itself
user7659542
different tools have different ways of doing it
user7659542
at the end of the day they integrate it into the device tree so you can access it. But how this is done depends.
Meaning that you don't estimate yourself as an expert right now, but you're plotting or imagining a course to this career goal.
user7659542
21:46
@Potatoswatter I don t know what part of my previous posts gave you the impression I was claiming I am an expert in OS atm
user7659542
I m working towards this
I never said that you said, at any point, that you're already an expert…
user7659542
mkay
Continuous discussion of a hypothetical does not make it actual
From my perspective you're an expert in embedded Linux, because I've only had one embedded job. It was using Freescale MCUs, using their bootstrap code generator for one part and their non-Linux MQX OS for another.
So I'm curious what makes custom embedded distros a viable business model and what work would be involved.
One weird idea is to have a very clean gentoo/nixos like distro that easily lets you deploy Qt to embedded TFT like displays. Ease of development drove Windows CE sales, for example.
user7659542
21:56
@Potatoswatter well the reason people choose a custom embedded linux, is to have 100% control of what goes in the kernel. Simple example: if your boards OS by default has a static driver for bluetooth which is not used in your product, you may want to remove that for multiple reasons. Also you can configure the OS however you want: no limitations.
But then I'm not sure if these guys ultimately worked out as viable businesses. It would seem that OSS as a strategy has few success stories.
> no limitations
user7659542
@Potatoswatter except this is not the only thing people want to choose when designing a custom OS
Eh, MQX had a flag to choose between preemptive and cooperative multitasking
user7659542
simple example: I have worked with a commercial configurable OS which did not allow you to add support for Python. But maybe you actually want that
22:00
I mean it as an example of configuration that Linux does not offer.
user7659542
@Potatoswatter AFAIK you can do that. You have to configure a quantum period and give your tasks the correct same priority
user7659542
But this requires you to recompile your kernel though
You can defeat the scheduler, but that's not the same as deleting it, right?
user7659542
there will always be a scheduler
user7659542
it is the scheduler which manages the cooperative aspect. Having a cooperative system does not imply there is no scheduler
user7659542
22:03
A scheduler is "merely" something which says which task shall run, regardless of whether there are priorities or not
At least, there's a timer interrupt with a handler that calls the scheduler which exists anyway.
But it implies that the scheduler is reentrant and whatever else… I don't recall details, but I think it was a bit of size difference.
Anyway, maybe that's not a great example.
Porting Python to a new platform would be risky business for a number of reasons. That's beyond configuration.
user7659542
you can add/remove it with Yocto. So, here again you have that flexibility
Python is pretty functional all processors due to the large user base. That being said it may run out of RAM etc, but its not "risky".
Given a Python-loving customer who says they found hardware which doesn't support Python, signing a contract to give it to them would be risky.
@traducerad This pretty clearly isn't (even close to) accurate. There may be somebody who does a fair amount of indirect contracting for defense designs, but at work I deal with enough different defense contractors to be quite certain many of them are completely separate designs done by entirely different people.
I sometimes kind of wish they'd been designed by the same people (or at least people who saw eye to eye), but then I think more about my job, and the fact that most of what I do is get them to work together, even though they weren't designed to (an in many cases, seem to have been designed specifically not to).
22:16
@JerryCoffin I don't think "all" was to be taken literally
user7659542
@JerryCoffin it is not that this is not accurate it s just that you see something different. What I wrote there is a fact. I have seen multiple aerospace companies outsourcing entire subsystem hardware designs to the same company
You didn't literally witness the operation of the entire industry
@Potatoswatter It's not merely "not all", it's pretty clear that it's not even a substantial percentage.
I'm guessing that this is about people in a particular locality?
user7659542
@JerryCoffin yes, it is a substantial %.
user7659542
22:18
you just cannot state that what I wrote there is incorrect. We live in totally different countries. What happens here may or may not happen in the US.
@traducerad Maybe if you count something well under one tenth of a percent as "substantial".
user7659542
@JerryCoffin it is well above 1%
user7659542
I cannot give names and details. But I can guarantee you, that if I told you more details you would be extremely surprised. And I am at quite a good position to know those things
user7659542
I have only worked in those industries. And those firms ship to all sorts of countries all over the world...
@traducerad Here's what I work on when I'm not on vacation: fuseintegration.com/products/dare
I work with vendors of defense/aerospace electronics all the time, and I can state as a simple fact that you're just plain wrong.
user7659542
22:23
@JerryCoffin that s fcking cool. But I will not tell you where I work :)
user7659542
Imagine this:
user7659542
the power supply system of company A is designed by firm X and the power supply from company B is made by that same hardware firm X. I think you can imagine this is already more than just 1%.
user7659542
There is quite a difference between outsourcing strategic subsystems and just power supplies.
user7659542
Note that power supplies are just for the sake of example
@traducerad Speaking from direct experience, most of them use the aerospace rated versions of the same power supplies as everybody else, mostly coming from places like Linear Technology and Maxim.
user7659542
22:27
@JerryCoffin yes, in aerospace industry. Because it is highly regulated. But terrestrial defence systems are less regulated and turns out multiple companies outsource to the same guys
user7659542
@JerryCoffin Do you know where the US army has its terrestrial weapons from?
user7659542
let that sink in, mate...
@traducerad All the work I do is in defense. Most of our contracts come from US military branches, but virtually everything we work with is under NATO standards, so we routinely test with radios (and such) from all the major European vendors as well as the US ones.
user7659542
@JerryCoffin Hmm looks like you guys are recruiting remote software engineers. But for some reason I cant open the job description on your website, it always opens another random page strangely enough. What skills does it take to be hired for their offices in CA?
Hello
user7659542
22:43
On an unrelated sidenote, I recently bought an iPhone for the very first time. It is a bit more expensive but it isnt too bad
user7659542
It works quite well. Nothing lags, the haptics are quite good and setup was easy and fast
@traducerad I'll let our HR people know there's a problem. Skills depend on the job, of course. For the backend, mostly C++ and (preferably) experience with tactical protocols like Link 11/16/22 and MADL. Since it's essentially all military contracting, you also have to be a US citizen and be able to qualify for a security clearance.
@CupOfJava Hello.
user7659542
@JerryCoffin Hmmm I m not American, so I guess this is useless
Time to marry an American
user7659542
Reminds me of that day I applied for a job at spacex when I was a student. They replied very fast and was very happy to receive an email from them. Untill I saw it was an automatic email telling me that I have to be American
user7659542
22:45
@Mikhail wanna marry me? I ll be the guy....
Its not gay unless there are two guys
user7659542
@Mikhail it s only gay if balls touch
It's only gay if you make eye contact
@JerryCoffin Have you had any recent experience writing good C++ interview questions. I was horrified to find that the C++ questions I came up with were not unique. (including the one I showed you two years ago)
And I always make eye contact ;)
22:49
@traducerad Yeah, unfortunately, I'm pretty sure all our jobs require US citizenship.
user7659542
@JerryCoffin This being said I have no clue whether financialy speaking it would make sense for me to move to the US....
@Mikhail I've had recent experience with trying to come up with some decent interview questions, but so far I've mostly failed.
@traducerad Even if you did it's like a 7-year process
user7659542
This year my company's revenue was 150k. Which is quite high for European standards. I dont want to go to the US to get 100k
user7659542
I feel like only senior engineers or people at FAANG make 150k+ in the US
22:51
You mean you salary is 150k?
user7659542
@Potatoswatter Revenue.
Then how would that be comparable to making 100k personally
That's not exactly true
@traducerad Without knowing a lot more about your current situation, I couldn't even begin to guess at that. And the US is a big place with a lot of variation, so a salary that would be great in Kansas would be poverty level in most of the larger cities.
user7659542
@JerryCoffin What would you need to know?
22:54
@JerryCoffin I keep running into this political problem. More senior engineers want the candidate to demonstrate "general software engineering skills" that include things like testing, documentation, and writing efficient code. I can't really imagine a test that will accurate test for these items, and I suspect it really becomes a matter of how well the candidate can communicate. I instead wanted a battery of 6 or so C++ questions where they'd have to spot design bugs.
user7659542
@JerryCoffin I do C, VHDL, some asm, have experience with OS configuration and kernel space dev. +/- 5 years of international experience.Have a masters degree in electronics and specialized in aerospace/defence by studying and working abroad. Speak 6 languages fluently. That s the summary about me.
I always include C++ as one of my spoken languages, this makes me look quirky creative and maybe technically talented.
user7659542
@Mikhail that s a running joke
@traducerad Probably the better way than trying to feed information to me would be to go to wolfram alpha, and type in something like: "from <your location> to <target location>". It has fairly comprehensive cost of living data and such.
user7659542
@JerryCoffin lol didnt know WA could do that
22:57
@traducerad Yeah, it has a lot of interesting little tid bits available.
@Mikhail 6 questions is a lot for one subject area. As to other engineering skills, why not have a question where they identify and write a missing testcase? Or find the error in documentation for a change, given a diff of code and a diff of docs?
user7659542
@JerryCoffin lol just gave me the distance in km from my city to San Diego and a couple of other useless things
user7659542
it just compared our cities
user7659542
Smth tells me I won t be making 200k is Cali. So I ll just stay here
user7659542
I need 50k at least to compensate for the American accent
23:01
@traducerad Should normally include some cost of living data. For example, I just picked from Warsaw to San Francisco, and got (among other things):
user7659542
I can t cope with hearing American english every day all day long
@Potatoswatter Those two items seem difficult to identify the correct response. For example, I remember an interview where I needed to write a median function, aka int median(float* values, int length) and most of the issues I identified were related to the signature. Then I had a conversation that went nowhere about whether a nullptr should throw an exception. Finding an error in documentation sounds like a 45 minute exercise.
user7659542
@JerryCoffin nope I don t get that info
finding an error in the diff of documentation, also given a diff in code
user7659542
just to clarify: I like many things about hte US, although I ve never been there. But I don't like the American accent
23:03
@traducerad Hmm...strange. Maybe you're coming from some place for which it lacks data though.
Is it a goal to make the questions less than 45 minutes?
user7659542
@JerryCoffin Hehe I strongly doubt that :)
user7659542
I tried warsaw-SF too and it didnt give me that info neither
@Potatoswatter Interview in an hour.
6 x 10 minute questions? That alone is going to drive away good candidates.
23:04
@Potatoswatter The questions are "spot 2 bugs in this code"
@traducerad Hmm...strange. I can't begin to guess about the vagaries of WA though.
@Potatoswatter Another weird one was to ask architecture questions where somebody would present the architecture of their favorite program. This was also hard to falsify and even verify (how the cracker jack do I know if they are correct). For example, if somebody showed me how CGAL works I couldn't check, and I suspect CGAL is designed like shit because the underlying philosophy of exactness is shit. (Its certainly 50x slower than the libraries I use or had to write)
user7659542
@JerryCoffin My city s area is as large as "Baton Rouge" in the US and has as many inhabitants as Houston
user7659542
lol wth is baton rouge. Never heard about that city
@Mikhail I've kind of decided that almost anytime you start with an objective idea of exactly what problems should be found/what the right answers are, you're probably not going to get a very meaningful result. I haven't been able to convince anybody to let me to it recently, but the best results I've had were from simply printing out some function (large enough to have at least a little to discuss, but not something monstrous) and simply talking about it.
23:08
@traducerad Maybe you'd like the accent there!
user7659542
@Potatoswatter Nah. I only like the British accents. My favourite are: geordie's and London's
user7659542
not even kidding
@JerryCoffin Yeah I'm kinda going down that path. But I need to really grade those guys. I want the candidate to discuss specific things, in this case error or issues with the code.
@Mikhail But I didn't start with a specific idea of what was right or wrong--the intent was a discussion, not a quiz. That's what makes it hard for others to accept though. It doesn't have specific right or wrong answers.
@JerryCoffin What does a good candidate or bad candidate look like in these cases?
23:10
@traducerad Your city also starts with a "B"!
user7659542
@Potatoswatter sshhht!!!!!
user7659542
@JerryCoffin I tend to find open discussions the best ways to assess one's level of knowledge. I once was asked to just explain concepts and found this a very interesting approach: "What are some of the things you should never do on embedded systems in an interrupt routine?" or "What can you tell me about stack and other types of memory?"
user7659542
rather that just asking "What does this function print?"
^ an encyclopedia can answer those questions.
@Mikhail Most start off a little confused, because they're expecting kind of a quiz where they're looking for specific things. In a few cases, I'll pick something that uses an unusual algorithm (e.g,. implements its own insertion sort instead of using std::sort). So there is a little bit of objective criteria that they should notice that and say something about it. But then I'd usually like to go on to a bit more about whether there was a reason to do that in this case, and if so what.
23:13
@JerryCoffin So what does a failed candidate look like? Is it just somebody who doesn't know C++. Not knowing C++ is a good reason to fail them, but seems to be a rather low threshold?
user7659542
@Mikhail this is why you engage a discussion and don't just ask a question and jump immediately to the next one. You keep on digging. He cant study an entire encyclopedia. Also asking to explain what the candidate has worked on himself on projects is quite good. Because he should be able to explain why he has taken certain decisions over others
I also was discouraged from applied to your current employer because they wanted C instead of C++ (at the time).
user7659542
Much better IMO than those typical American algorithmic questions: "So you applied for an OS /yocto engineering job. Please write a shortest path algoritm"

This fcking did really happen to me! It still pisses me off

Sorry it might sound as if I m hating on Americans. But it s not the case
@traducerad Yes he can. I mean I have encyclopedic knowledge about many things that I haven't succeeded at. Also many ideas are debatable or useless (like micro optimization).
@Mikhail Somebody who doesn't know C++ enough to understand the code is a clear problem. Somebody who doesn't pick up on that being an insertion sort (and what that means about efficiency) would be a lesser problem, but still a pretty serious negative point. Somebody who can intelligently discuss when you might use an insertion sort even on a large data set would definitely be a positive point.
user7659542
23:16
@JerryCoffin very nice example of the type of questions I hate and I find not representative for the jobs I apply for
@traducerad You should consider applying for more technically skilled jobs :-)
user7659542
@Mikhail ow ow ow.... That hurts
@JerryCoffin The last point is kinda hard. Whats the success rate for this question as a percentage? Like how many people you get pass it to the next stage?
@traducerad Well, obviously it has to be something applicable to the job at hand. When I did this, I usually picked something I'd written fairly recently, so I was reasonably certain it was at least applicable to something we were doing. But yes, if you're looking for a build engineer, the questions should probably have at least some relevance to builds (etc.)
user7659542
@JerryCoffin fair enough. In your case it seems to make sense. But many companies dont need those things yet ask shortest-path algorithm stuff or other crap
23:22
@Mikhail Yes, the last point is a tough one, and I'm not necessarily expecting a really good answer there (though it has happened once in a while). But even if I have to kind of lead them to the answer, if I can prompt them enough to say: "okay, we obviously have to do all the iterations of the outer loop, but what circumstances would let us execute fewer iterations of the inner loop?" and get an answer.
Okay, if you will allow me a direct question, what's the percentage positive/negative for that question?
I've been running into another political difficulty. My new employer doesn't have many C++ people. They all code in a hipster language from Scotland. We need more C++ people but the questions I asked about were deemed to difficult and not related to coding. The questions I had were basic ownership issues related to shared pointers. Do you guys think asking the candidate to identify a stack overflow when a linked list is made of a smart pointers is too hard?
user7659542
I would fail
user7659542
because I dont even know what a smart pointer is
#noShame
@Mikhail Distressingly low, but that may be down to the recruitment agency we're using. We do start with an "opening round" (so to speak) at the fizz-buzz level, to at least sort out those who flat-out can't write even something utterly trivial. I haven't counted, but I'd around 60-70% fail at that. Of those the ones that get to the "discussion" section, around 30% fail to even notice it's usually an insertion sort, another 30% don't know what that means at all.
It is a little bit of a niche thing, I only know about it because of a conference talk
23:27
Maybe 5% can understand when that might make sense.
@JerryCoffin Yeah this is what I'd expect, if not higher. But I think that's a workable number?
It's not that it's difficult it's just that the question doesn't tell you much about their skill, I feel.
@PeterT I don't know. It seems like something you'd either encounter by working with graphs or perhaps you'd encounter by thinking about ownership. Certainly identifies good candidates. Unless, of course, they were losers who heard it from a talk :-)
user7659542
@Mikhail I think it's reasonable, yeah. Lowering standards to hire more people quickly reduces the productivity of existing employees trying to train the new people the basics, so it's pretty quickly a losing proposition.
23:30
haha, I guess. But if they just didn't work on a code-base with many smart-pointers, they might just not have come across it
I just don't think it's necessarily a good exclusionary question
@PeterT You got a favorite question?
I think if I ask 6 of these questions we can kinda tally the score.
Hm, nothing really good comes to mind. But yeah, I think if it's just like a part of some questionaire it's fine.
@Mikhail I'm not sure it's really too hard, but I tend to think almost anything that starts with linked lists has to work really hard to be very meaningful. Good uses for linked lists are few and far between (and thanks to caching, constantly shrinking).
@JerryCoffin Yeah but graphs are fairly common.
True, but writing custom graphs is not common in a bunch of problem fields
23:35
I've been haunted by writing custom graphs for years. Three times in the last 10 years. Most of the time its cleanup work.
"Sometimes you need graphs, and then it gets messy." It's hard to generalize about software engineering.
@Mikhail They are, but most times I've dealt with graphs (at least recently) they used some sort of compressed format, not individually allocated nodes.
Ugg. I have so many horror stories about this graph problem I'm working on for the next few months. But that is another story. I know how to make it not suck, but they won't let me fix it.
So my interview will ask candidates about the design problems with one of our code bases?
I guess if I think back to it, I did see the same problem in a Java lecture like over a decade ago. Where it was about implementing a linked list clear function by recursively calling a delete or something. But I don't know if I'd be transferring that to C++ destructors in the environment of an interview, if I didn't already know about it.
Then when they get the job, maybe somebody pull the old switcheroo and say "congratulations on passing the C++ interview, now you're working on a team that speaks a programing language harder to understand than spoken Scottish. Welcome to the Bay Area."
23:41
Asking candidates to do your development: lame. Asking candidates to formulate solutions that management won't allow: badass
user7659542
@Mikhail For the noobs like me: What types of graphs are you talking about? Googling "graphs software" doesn t give many useful results
@Mikhail That's never fun. The last time I encountered it, the excuse given was that we had too much invested, and really fixing it would take too long. So while I was sitting in the meeting planning out the (months-long!) schedule for patching up the broken code, I wrote a new one. Admittedly, still very minimal, but by the end of the meeting, it was meeting goals they set for about six weeks out on the existing code...
@Potatoswatter I used to ask candidates how to unit test Qt GUI code. I still don't know how to do that :-)
@Mikhail Haha my company does that (not in the bay area)
@traducerad like linked-list, DAGs, etc
user7659542
23:41
ah...
user7659542
@PeterT Oh DAG is the sort of thin you d implement to create a Finite State Machine mechanism?
yeah, those are a type of graph
basically anything with nodes and data of how they're connected to each other
@traducerad ...or things like searching (trees are a subset of DAGs).
@traducerad The A in DAG is for Acyclic, so that would cover FSMs without loops
user7659542
That s very funny. I once worked for a client who was using an old codebase. One of internal things of that codebase was their FSM mechanism. It was written 15 years ago and worked flawlessly. But nobody really understood how it worked. People just knew how to add functions and states to the FSM
it even did some sort of optimization before starting. But litterally nobody understood that optimization part
23:44
@Potatoswatter BTW you probably have the same work computer as me: chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/50998395#50998395
@Potatoswatter ...but also covers things like Patricia Tries, which sort of hide a loop inside a single node.
user7659542
Their FSM got so big that nobody even totally understood it and could fully grasp it. Because people have just kept on adding states and stuff to it for 15 years
@traducerad When they can no longer fully grasp it, it has effectively become an infinite state machine. :-)
@Mikhail Haha, well also we don't actually use C++ and the other language isn't the same as yours. I just meant the general idea of putting an aspirational language in the job title.
@Potatoswatter This was worse. It was actually their main language, so people would be hired with the understand they'd have to join the cult.
23:49
@Mikhail Yes, that part is what I mean too.
20 years ago (or so) the US military was still hiring people to write JOVIAL. I think they've finally at least sort of given up on it though.
[But I'm pretty sure it's only "sort of"--I don't think they even have a schedule for when they'll be able to replace all of it, not to mention having gotten rid of it yet.]
user7659542
Soon the Rust programming language will take over the world
user7659542
together with Python
user7659542
C/C++ sw engineers will become useless
yeah, huh
23:54
I've shooting the next bozo who combines C and C++. I've rejected enough "embeded" engineers to know they are different langauges.
user7659542
remember when people used to make fun of Python? Turns out it outgrew many other languages.
Wait for Rust...
I would hope any C or C++ engineer worth their salt has some kind of transferable skill
They can just sell plasma like the rest of humanity
user7659542
On a more serious note. I am more worried about model based design...
like is there even anyone that programs just C or C++ and never touches any other language
user7659542
23:55
I have seen quite some defence contractors that started using it
user7659542
because they claim making bugs with such languages is almost impossible
"X based design", sounds like another one of those ideas that are useful but taken to an unhealthy extremist point
@Mikhail I combined them once. The rulers of genetic engineering were not happy with me though--after the resulting abomination was dead, they had to put about a decade's worth of wear on the neuralizers, and it's almost certain some people still have nightmares about it.
is that like a fancy dressed up way to say "declarative programming"
@PeterT I will posit that any principle that has any potential to be useful can also be taken to an unhealthy extreme.
23:58
everything in moderation, even moderation.
@PeterT especially moderation.

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