Pet chooks and trolls who are inching closer and attracting my attention get 1 common treatment - when caught, they are both getting a long and thorough petting regardless whether they like it or not! :x
After keeping on piling on more things to take care of during the past few years, I am on the edge of breaking down. Struggling to keep things afloat.
It's like doing 4 part time jobs, but at the same time in charge of all four. I am annoyed to the core a lot of the times. But I have no one else to blame but myself.
To be fair, things are doing okay. But they could be better.
Another project and cmake delivers constant pain as expected.
I probably spent over an hour trying to make a custom target go into a folder in the solution explorer and finally will just give up and accept the wasted hour.
@Mgetz Maybe it's just me, but I think you hit the nail on the head with "insanely".
But I suppose I can understand how it happens, and how somebody would be really upset if they had a huge project, and suddenly they couldn't add any more. Having to convert a project that large to use other tools would undoubtedly be a pain.
@Mgetz That was kind of my point--a user starts with something that's probably suitable for VS. It grows to the point that it really isn't any more, but it's hard to pick a time when you need to bite the bullet and make serious changes to your build system. So people end up using VS projects for systems much larger than it really handles well.
The sprint-based mentality of (most?) modern project management doesn't help. PMs have had it drilled into their heads that they need to deliver new features every two (or whatever) weeks, regardless. So, many projects build up technical debt until they implode.
@Mgetz Call it what you will, but consider code that works but is excessively difficult to build or maintain. In the long term, there's benefit from putting work into making it easier to build/maintain--but the work to do so doesn't directly fix bugs or produce new features.
Bottom line: for a real project, it's rarely just about where the code is right now. It's about where it can/will go over the next few years (or more--sometimes decades).
fuck, they made me switch to CamelCase at work, and now code looks like shit and my repetitive strain injury went up. Ugg, I didn't think I'd give a fuck but now I do. Also still gotta refactor to make the change :-/
@Mgetz At least from my perspective, that seems to largely miss the point. We started with VS, so let me use that as an example. VS has been in use for over 20 years. It's had at least one major rewrite during that time, but it's probably overdue for another, and the ideal would probably be to throw at least half of it away and start over on those parts.
So, for a given bug or feature, a PM probably has at least three separate options: do a quick (and probably somewhat dirty) fix for that problem alone, do a somewhat larger fix to clean up that area of code and fix three bugs in the process, or leave it for the next complete rewrite (or a combination, such as the quick and dirty fix, the a major rewrite later).
@JerryCoffin it's not the PM's choice or at least it shouldn't be. The team should decide as a group on a solution and estimate that. The PO should then make a prioritization decision. If the PM is making these decisions then you're not doing agile
@Mgetz A PO prioritizes features--but if they ask for three particular features, it's up to the PM to decide whether to do that as three little (possibly ugly) changes, or one major rewrite that cleans up a whole section of code.
@JerryCoffin but that's giving the PM power to dictate solution. Which is the antithesis of agile which is focused on a self-organizing team. The team makes the solution. The PM is supposed to be worried about scheduling stories in a ranked order backlog. You're talking Wagilefail not agile
PM's should never be giving technical solutions. That's for technical folks to do
@Mgetz I think you're being dogmatic. Consider that (for example) two bugs have been prioritized. The technical team points out that they can fix those (and only those), or they can do something else that takes 20% longer, but also fixes 3 other bugs in the process. But those haven't been prioritized (yet). So, at least if you care about doing things well rather than following a methodology religiously, you end up with a negotiation between the technical people and the PM about how to proceed
And proceeding is likely to involve shuffling priorities, so making a decision will typically involve negotiation between the PO, the PM, and the technical people.
@JerryCoffin not really? If they haven't been prioritized then they aren't of business value yet. You don't operate in a vacuum. You prioritize and make logical decisions based on scope. If one of those three bugs takes 8 times longer to fix than the two and the two are prioritized you deal with the two first
but you don't make decisions based on things you don't have scope for
that's standard grooming and triage
otherwise you're stealing work from your ability to deliver
@Mgetz Sorry, but you're being foolish. Not being prioritized doesn't mean they lack business value. It means they think other things have more value. But when/if you can save 50% overall by dealing with multiple bugs (or features) together, ignoring that efficiency would be foolish.
tbf I could have phrased things better, to say they don't have business value yet... was wrong. I should have said they are of "Unknown business value"