Hey guys, there's one company I want to hear back from but I haven't heard back yet (I should have heard something last week). Should I email them by EOD today or...?
@KendallFrey I have never heard anybody ever say that delegates are the c# representation of functions, and not higher order functions, but just functions, and that's what delegates are for.. never heard that before ever.
@Spencer, I don't know what you're talking about. You complained about the use of wrapper so I corrected that. What term don't you like the use of now?
@barlop - I'm not complaining. I'm saying until you come back with some examples and ask "What's this called" or articles using terms correctly which demonstrate the question you're asking there's no point in continuing the discussion. If you didn't know the definition of a wrapper it's likely your other definitions are off and it makes it impossible to understand what you're saying.
I understand that's kind of harsh to say but it's true.
Npm - let me install stuff in folder structures so deep that it breaks windows. Also, let me only do it this way 50% of the time. The other 50% i'll do it the right way
@Failsafe it's like someone missing a break clause on a recursive algorithm, except that instead of the stack, the limiting resource is your filesystem
Rumour has it that modern filesystems are quite large.
@Jeremy I like the notion of semver, it's just that sometimes library authors don't follow it, make breaking changes to a lib that's used in many places, and then installing anything in that dependency tree using npm is broken forever or until the author fixes it
@Jeremy not if you want working software, in many cases
it produces the onerous situation that any project can be DOA if between them publishing a working version and you downloading it, one of its dependencies' authors makes a breaking change
We've had a lot of announcements lately about changes to Stack Overflow, including the addition of Documentation, the Power of Teams, and our plan to serve programmers better by integrating Jobs.
We started by updating the profile so you could show off a bit about who you are but now we're exp...
npm will pull the latest version of everything in the dependency graph and authors should not make breaking changes such that npm won't automatically pull them, but if one of them messes up, you can install broken software through no fault of its author
but that means if a project's author never updates their 'manifest' (whatever the name is) you're stuck with old versions forever, defeating the point of a package manager
@bluefeet Looks good. I don't use careers but this looks like an improvement. The top-voted existential criticism of the change seems without much merit.
@bluefeet - A lot of the listed stuff seems excessive in the proposed page. The reason people like a nice one page printout is that it is brief, and in business there is power to brevity.
@bluefeet - I feel like the mantra of making life easier for developers has kind of been taken out of context by the current feature outlook. I think all 4 million user's lives would be made better by improving the esoteric failed search mechanism Stack Overflow employs. Or just completely give it up and switch to using an integrated google search.
@Failsafe While it's on existing Careers CV, we're trying to make those things more pronounced on the new version. You, as a dev, should be able to show off the stuff that makes you proud. Not necessarily hidden in a traditional resume
@bluefeet - I don't really believe in a one-size-fits-all presentation of my work history to employers everywhere. I tend to tailor my work experience on a resume so that it's relevant to whatever job I'm applying to.
@bluefeet - That is one facet, but not the pressing one to Stack Overflow. I mean, most people do not switch jobs to do socioeconomic situations more than a lack of available jobs. Also, I would almost rebut the fact that developers need help getting jobs - we are the lowest unemployment rate of all jobs (including doctors!) at 1.8%.
I do a lot of phone screens with basically just the 1 page CV in front of me. Competitive applicants usually have some open-source account linked (some un-competitive ones, too). Sometimes I'll comb through their contributions on the phone and ask about some stuff they've done recently and ask design questions.
I'd like to trust that StackOverflow's fundamental format resists recruiters swarming in and filling the site with garbage the way LinkedIn works, but I am somewhat low on trust at present. They'll find a way.
@Greg - Go to your local vet, and ask them to board a dog for a week. They will have one available. Make sure not to get a mean one. Maybe after all that work she will change her mind.
I'll probably never ask for a dog because I like sitting down with a cup of coffee and not having to think about anything other than what I'm doing for hours on end.
@bluefeet - I understand that is a possibility. However, it doesn't seem to be the glaring issue facing developers I would address I suppose. I mean, I hate to say it but the largest pressing issue facing developers is their ability to self educate. This effects the entry level developers, or those becoming developers - who greatly outnumber us as already employed developers.
@Failsafe - And then you are really screwed lol! Where do these people turn to? They do need help. I don't really feel like hand holding, hence the "I hate to say it" part, but really budding developers need help learning how to self educate.
"Did you ever stop to think that a dog is the only animal that doesn't have to work for a living? A hen has to lay eggs, a cow has to give milk, and a canary has to sing. But a dog makes his living by giving you nothing but love."
@Jeremy - Because it represents that shift in priorities that a lot of companies go through. They start off by offering a great product and listening to their users and experience some tremendous growth for doing it well. Then they become so big they feel like they don't need to worry about offering what their users want because the users can't leave easily.
nobody will get on SO or linkedin or anywhere else reading somebody's CV or page or whatsoever then say "Hey i want to hire this guy". after all, it's all about how to find the right ppl to spend time interviewing, and a one page CV is still so far the best way
@Failsafe - I guess the real issue with your analogy is, would you like doctors to become doctors by 40 or 30? The quicker new developers get used to self educating, the better developers will be going forward.
@SpencerRuport I don't know about you (you've been on SO longer than I have), but I still feel that SO does a really good job at listening to its users and giving them what they want. And I don't think that this change is any sort of departure away from that.
@Jeremy - I don't either necessarily. I'm just suspicious due to the fact that, as @TravisJ has pointed out, users have been much more vocal about their desire for other features. I don't think I've heard anybody asking for improvements to the CV page.
@kush - Who knows why that person ended up with that job. More than likely he was uneducated and couldn't handle personal combat very well. Definitely a very brave person.
@TravisJ because i need pretty quick algorithm, and from when i've seen(tried some quantizations on the net)-the result were not really good.. 1sec in the minimum
@Jeremy - Plus I just don't think this kind of thing is very effective regardless of the motivation. With regard to developers who tends to have the most organized and complete LinkedIn profiles? The people with some real talent who never have trouble finding work? Or that person who struggles to write a for loop?