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17:00
im not saying that
im saying you could get a job as one though
Well, yeah
you may not have it for very long
People don't give me the light of day
Cos I've been coding professionally for less than 2 years.
yea me neither
"You're 22 and you don't have much experience so here, have less money and do the same amount of work"
"Okay bye"
17:00
yup me too
:D
it takes time to earn respect
but I'm really not like you guys
Squiggle knows ma pain.
I'm still not awesome or don't feel awesome yet
17:01
I don't view myself as the be all end all developer
I have a huge amount to learn
yea same
But when I see older devs who don't know shit it frustrates me.
wanna get easy respect?
take the MCP test from microsoft
easy as fuck certification to take
its literally intro to c#
Lol
no one knows that though
17:02
Hey guys, what should I make sure I know as a good developer?
Like what have you seen in senior devs that they should know?
learn how to problem solve
or be good at it
About C#, MVC, etc..?
Nothing. Like FailSafe said how to problem solve
@KalaJ How to write trash code that no one else can maintain xD
literally language does not matter
you will be picking up new languages on the job in a matter of weeks
maybe even 1 week
just know how to solve a problem
17:04
Hard to teach that though
yep
you pick it up through experience
also if you write maintanable code, especially as a contractor, managers will give you really good references
cool I see
I do want to start my own side projects so I can finally call something my own and maintain it and learn something new.
a good way to do that is to do something with coworkers, find like 2 good developers and make something
i do that with 2 of my previous coworkers, works out pretty well. it's fun to work in that type of environment, plus it helps to have complete design control of something rather than just "the BA's wanted this go do it"
tl;dr just keep coding you'll be fine
I made a proof of concept earlier for someone and they sent me an email back saying "It works in chrome but not in IE9!"
Tested in IE9, perfectly functional.
Not sure wtf he was on about.
haha
17:10
>2015
>still using ie9
he probably meant ie6
im still using netscape
Also not sure why they tested it in other browsers
I told him it was a POC not a finished product lol
Some people just have to find something negative about everything
yea
they are testers
17:11
I basically vOvd
ive tested before
Our testers break literally everything they're awesome
I find testing soul destroying
if i had to do that again i would blow my brains out
Utterly and completely fucking boring
Yep!
Well, being a QA doesn't equal being an asshole
17:12
Not at all
Our QAs are lovely
its the worst thing i could ever imagine doing
And they're really really good at breaking things lol
hehe
I had to do testing this morning
On 3 browsers, not including IE9 and 10, then on 4 android devices and 2 apple devices
Our website is not small.
an isolated component or the whole shite?
17:13
whole site
full release regression testing lol
sounds interesting, and boring :p
Our release cycle is basically early Agile
It's not well thought out
every 2 weeks?
And our stages are abysmal
Content team works directly on live CMS lol
like a baws
17:14
They don't give a shit, if they break something on live they tell management the devs did something wrong kappa.
Then we say why the fuck are you managing live content on the fly
Then they say well we're not gonna write it all twice are we
WELL YEAH
DO YO JOB FOOOOOS
haha, sounds like an awesome office culture right there
it's not all that bad. Content are just stubborn and like to feel important ;D
pointing fingers everywhere
@Sippy decent CMS should have staging
why are they not on a test pointer?
17:16
@TomW Nail, head. Our CMS is from 2010 and it was cheap then.
Whatcha gonna do :/
Duplicate db and site, you're 10x more safe
Top tip, don't migrate to Sitecore
:D
@scheien Our live CMS replicates to an external server
@TomW: hehe, you doing sitecore?
Because Capita.
17:17
ugh
Sitecore has features out the ass. 'Features'
Mmmm features
tasty features
you mean bugs?
:)
Aka bloat
morning kids
17:18
@scheien I have done some
@TomW: and I take it you aren't happy about it?
evening @Pheonixblade9
Overengineered, bloated inner platform from hell
overengineered?
Actually has some decent ideas at its core but has so much NIH crap plastered over it, actually getting it to do just Do. is a total nightmare
Ours is great, any objects that use a CMS type in our code can't be inspected at runtime
17:21
@TomW: NIH?
got an interview at a startup... their backend is Rails, anybody have any experience with Ruby? Seems like an easy language to learn.
Because all the getters time out l0l
(NIH=Not invented here)
@Pheonixblade9 Afaik, C# with VB syntax
@Pheonixblade9, railsbridge.org
17:21
interesting. so... lots of whitespace and function and such but it's not a shitty language?
I should stop calling it VB syntax.
It's not a shitty language.
@KalaJ thanks... in person in NY and CA though :P
I attended one of their workshop, it's pretty good
But I hate all languages that don't have terminators and use indentation instead of brackets. So I'm biased.
oh I mean
they have online tutorials you can do too
17:22
oh?
@Pheonixblade9: Heard good things about it, never tried it myself though.
It's easy to learn if you know C# and MVC already
@scheien sitecore is a classic case of a company that started with a need to sell something, and then built the product
@TomW: hehe, I see
Look! It has all the things!
17:24
@TomW: I guess that's where EPiServer are going, after the merge with ektron.
The admin portal is a clone of the Windows Vista desktop. In the browser. I am not joking.
holy shit :/
@Pheonixblade9, this is what I was initially referring to though: docs.railsbridge.org/docs
that's what they do at the workshops
@KalaJ thanks :)
all of the tutorials and instructions are online
17:26
I have nothing to do right now so may as well learn something
I was gonna learn Meteor, but I suppose if I might get an actual job out of this...
I just hope the tutorials aren't too basic for them. Some of it is like what are functions, arrays, strings lol
but at least you learn the syntax lol
Your current job fubar @Pheonixblade9?
@scheien kinda. I've learned consulting is 99% just fixing shitty code other consultants wrote years ago
IE9 was validating fields badly because placeholder polyfill was conflicting with empty fields, due to it using value
	<!--[if IE 9]>
		<script>
			$('[placeholder]').removeAttr('placeholder');
		</script>
	<![endif]-->
problem solved
@Pheonixblade9: yea, I've heard that a few times. That sucks though. Your current employer doesn't have anything else you can do? Assign you to a different project/customer where you can participate in a new product or something similar?
17:29
@scheien nah, I've asked
ugh, that's bad.
How is the market for a dev in Seattle nowadays?
lol, I could get a job this week if I put my mind to it
it might not be a good job
but I could get a job as a contractor in a week, I'd say
thing is, I want a better job
I'm learning nothing here. I'm being shoehorned into ".NET dev" which unfortunately is code for "maintains shitty legacy systems designed by non-engineers"
we always do mate
Unfortunately there's a lot of jobs like that :(
I do a lot of webforms on a daily basis. Which is... boring.
but coworkers, and the rewriting the codebase to MVC makes it bearable
@Pheonixblade9 my last job i was moved to test to create a regression testing framework from scratch because the middleware/backend code was trash
i quit shortly thereafter
literally copy pasting unit tests
thousands
@Failsafe yeah I'm basically having to be an SDET these days
there's no QA on my team
17:39
now i do web
100000000000000000000x better
@scheien I don't get to do any rewriting/replatforming. I have a giant spec handed to me by functional analysts that can't be changed
they realllllly don't understand agile here
they just load up with the latest buzzwords, and call it the day?
it can be agile
agile doesnt necessarily mean you create all your own content/requirements
the ba's have their cycle and you have yours
"we're agile, and running the latest tech, .net 4.6 with winforms"
@scheien no, it's very detailed. There's no room for me to think
it's just "go write this shit, code monkey. we didn't ask for your opinion"
17:41
welcome to big business
@Pheonixblade9: sounds like small waterfalls
thats how being a contractor is
agile, the waterfall way.
if you want something else go live in san fran and work at a startup
startup = selling your soul?
17:42
startup = design control
working 18 hour days
living under your desk
hehe yeah
yea pretty much
That's not for me
Guess wifey and kids would've left pretty quick
17:43
companies dont understand you can have that environment
without the hours
most businesses are stuck with a management model from the 70's
indeed
and yea it works but not with IT
micro management
especially as technology evolves
so does the workplace
I worked for a company where I needed to "check in" and "check out" every day
like a time clock thingy from the 50s factories
17:44
yea a punchcard
indeed
i wish everywhere could be netflix
and if I didnt have at least 8 hours each day, they called me in for a "meeting"
but then again, 20-30 years from now people will complain about that business model and how its old
I still remember the day I left 15mins before.
Those 15 minutes resulted in a 1 hour 30minutes meeting where they yelled at me for not doing my job etc
17:46
What was the name of the company?
you should find a different job
I found a different job right there after
oh i didnt read the top part
whoops
Called my former employer and asked if they needed any help, and that's where I am today
I feel like we as developers need to call out bad companies.
17:47
@SpencerRuport: I'm a bit paranoid, so I prefer not to tell.
we dont need to do anything
as we evolve as developers they will get left behind
its already happening
Yeah true.
wow... VS Task Runner Explorer even picks up on dynamically constructed gulp tasks...
Since there are people from my area that stepping by here every now and then
:)
17:48
It's just that they don't understand why it's happening and they keep blaming other variables... or the developers themselves.
like i said
management model from the 70's
doesnt work in IT
literally office space IRL
I was thinking the other day, all these people are worried about robots taking their jobs. Really they should worry about technically minded people taking their jobs.
That's happening at a much faster rate.
one of the reasons i chose computer science was because somebody has to program the robots
job security confirmed for life
17:51
@SpencerRuport: Bad companies do get called out.
That's why I would probably not take a job at Statoil.
if i looked ad my previous company on glassdoor the reviews are not good
you can call out companies that way
apparently, dev who used altova said he installed it a while back but not sure what the problem is for me
and it works too
@SpencerRuport: Weren't you supposed to go to sweden or something for a project?
guys I think I might know why but let's see if it makes sense
17:55
@scheien - Yeah the company I was working for was trying to score a contract with a company based in sweden. They didn't get the contract.
And they spent two years of 10 employees full time salaries chasing after it.
Another brilliant decision by management.
Here's what I have in my solution: pastebin.com/fucv1hw4
that investment really paid off
here's the error message: [System.Runtime.InteropServices.COMException] = {"Retrieving the COM class factory for component with CLSID {533BAC07-C702-4D91-8D37-39FDC919A19C} failed due to the following error: 80040154 Class not registered (Exception from HRESULT: 0x80040154 (REGDB_E_CLASSNOTREG))."}
is it because the CLSID does not match the GUID in the pastebin?
17:57
Yep. "Investment". Soon after I got placed on a project they had bought through "strategic acquisition". Of course they didn't have any developers review the code. That would be insane right? You don't have a carpenter look at a house before you pay money for it. (sarcasm)
Anyway so the code was 10 years old and some of the worst I had ever seen. Gave some recommendations on immediate fixes. Management is reeling from the loss of the huge gamble they took and telling us to chase after billable work. Ya know, basically the same strategy that led to the bad code in the first place.
So I quit.
Companies are run by gambling addicts who don't find investing in infrastructure very exciting so it never happenes.
I would've done the same.
Buying 10 years of technical debt is probably the worst possible thing to do.
not if you sell the company and start over
lol ye
:)
which is usually what happens
its like 8 years
The genies part was they claimed "We use all the latest technologies in this project."
18:00
the average life span
Of course they didn't mention they use all other technologies too.
latest meaning vb6 + some awesome legacy delphi?
thats like saying my car uses the latest technology
They used Web-RPC, Servlets, Struts and Spring
enjoy this cassette player
18:01
It was a java app.
whats the better version of servlets called
slowcooked
@Failsafe: webforms
LOL no
They hand rolled their own ORM of sorts and then tacked on some minimal Hibernate stuff so they could claim "We use hibernate"
haha :D
18:02
java based
oh JWS
guys
@SpencerRuport: I can't help myself, I'm laughing. :p
where did you learn the tasks and threads subject?
They had two projects called "entities" with duplicate entities. One had 100,000 lines of code, the other had 250,000 lines. The most senior developer couldn't tell me the difference between the two entity libraries.
google mostly
18:03
@Slashy - In college. But that was before there were many tutorials about it.
@scheien - It's funny to me too now. I'm grateful I have the option to walk away from that sort of thing.
the more years in the biz the easier it is to laugh at a company and walk off
@SpencerRuport: yep, it takes some time to digest fubar situations like that.
OTOH it's frustrating because I really just want to work on a project that isn't headed straight for the waste basket.
start your own project
i wish we would learn it in my high school :)
18:05
yeah, it's nice to know that the project you're working on would live for a few years, and that your time isn't just a waste.
@Failsafe - I have. And it's still being used. I meant I want to work on another.
The company I was working for just decided they had all the functionality they needed and just wanted to maintain the app.
I worked on a project that the customer paid (alot) for, that still isn't released. It was finished over 2 years ago.
Just sitting there in the VC, rotting away
It is.
well. I'm off. Some household tasks that needs to get done. Cheers.
18:10
d'oh fuck
!!wiki up
Up is the Y-axis relative vertical direction opposed to down. Up or UP may also have several additional meanings: == Places == -up, a suffix in Australian place names United Provinces (disambiguation) University Park, Texas Upper Peninsula of Michigan, United States Uttar Pradesh, India Eup (administrative division) == Art, entertainment, and media == === Film === Up! (1976 film), a 1976 adult comedy by Russ Meyer Up (1984 film), a 1984 short film Up (2009 film), a 2009 animated film by Disney/Pixar === Games === Up (video game), a video game based on the film of the same name ===...
what is up
Disney/Pixar === Games === Up (video game)
18:21
media == === Film
thats some crazy comparison man
There must be an implicit conversion in there for the == ===
I think the first == casts to boolean and then assigns media to that value, then it compares to the actual value of film. Since film is never a boolean value, that is always false so it must be that media does not equal film.
usually eat some fruit when I get home, but its been great for work skipping having to eat while here.
18:39
I need to get on this soylent train
i heard soylent green is pretty good
!!google soylent green
its not real sorry
bad joke
it tastes kinda like dirt right? seems like some unsweetened mint and chocolate flavor would go well with that.
kinda like tea but thicker.
So the campus of this company has a small rec area.
yay! 40k
18:51
There's a putting green! :D
@scheien I'm applying for startups ;) I have an interview thurs morning
@MikeEdenfield, LOL you were right! I needed to install Altova and it works.
@SpencerRuport - You need to get a Happy Gilmore putter :)
@ton.yeung I drink soylent sometimes. It's really just a joke on the soylent novella.
@TravisJ - Dang dude good job.
18:51
it tastes kinda like liquified oatmeal. Not bad, not good. Very neutral
I've been enjoying Blue Apron. Cheap, balanced nutrition, low calorie
Blue Apron is fun
Kind of makes you feel like you are a mini chef too :)
Indeed.
Except if you burn the shit out of it like I do :(
@TravisJ nice!
18:56
@Url.Action("Action", "Controller") I am using it in MVC5, but how can i create a URL for API controller ?
as api controller has api/controller/action format.
@SpencerRuport - haha yeah that is always a bummer, I dropped an entire packet of pasta on the ground once, and also managed to get my hand inside of the boiling water
@JohanLarsson :D
I earned rep today, been steady at ~40 rep per week for a while

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