@Codeman I'd probably talk more about what my team does, and try to get input from them about how they think, but my approach to interviews is weird ;)
@Codeman relax, i believe nobody(or at least very few) is questioning your origin question of "what's the difference between tree and graph?". It's more the answer you are expecting or willing to accept. "a workflow is a type of graph" is not a accurate answer to question "what is a graph?", if you expect that kind of answer, you can lose your question to "what context can you describe as graph"
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Like, I interviewed at a place where their technical interviews were "write us a program that does $task. You can use whatever language you want and whatever resources you want, including your interviewer. You have three hours."
@Codeman i think that is true.. thank you for reminding me not to interview at one of those firms, AND I believe you are correct, and depending on the role your applying for you SHOULD know cs101 concepts
@Codeman - I think people are just saying it's possible to know the concepts and have the knowledge but be unaware of the the theory, terms or the way it's generally represented in a structured classroom.
I dont think someone should need to know all / do all in web/software dev.. it's getting too broad.. I should not need to know angular and dba stuff.. and a zillion things in between
@JoJo I wouldn't expect someone to know angular for an angular job, necessarily. I would expect them to have pretty deep knowledge of javascript so they could get up to speed quickly
I think what CodeMan is saying if you want to get a job that involves working with data structures extensively, you should know your data structures extensively. It sounds fair tbh
yeah, if you're applying for a job that is going to be just maintaining simple websites, fine. But I work on a service that services millions and millions of people. The fundamentals have to be down pat for you
@Codeman amen, I agree. That's why I got to do a better job of specifying the jobs I am applying for.. I dont want to be the guy that KNOWS EVERYTHING.. if I was they would need to pay me 200k plus lol
much of the dissenting views from the room are saying "you shouldn't have to have a CS degree to get a job" - well, no. But you should have a basic knowledge of the fundamentals. Period
When I talk about the projection my linq query made on the injected servisebus object that raised the workflow event to log the SQL statement ... I get blank looks
I have 16 years in web dev and have UTTERLY failed phone quizzes lol.. they are right and I am right.. I need more concepts/sw dev exp under my belt. I am right cause I have experience
I mean... I can sugar coat it as much as I want, but if you're not pretty damn good, you probably aren't gonna get a job at a large tech company. The competition bar is too high
@Wardy well - now you learned something, and any day where you learn something is a good day. Keep being curious and looking for new stuff and you'll get to the point where you can say "graphs? pfft, ask me a hard question"
lol cause that's where I got my issue.. if they want me there with TOP CHOPS.. they gonna need to pony up 200k with my years exp.. but as I am.. 100k works
I just...I dunno. I work on software that handles billions of dollars of financial information a year. I don't know what a graph is. Does that mean that I shouldn't be working on this software?
@TomW "I really feel that microservices proactively leveraged in the cloud are the most cromulent methods of making customers happy and building stockholder value"
"GIVE THAT GUY A BOARD SEAT"
user47589
the difference between graphs and trees? one bores you, you can get stoned off the other
@Jeremy I think if you're building a startup and you just need to get an MVP out or die, sure, cut corners. But if you don't have a good architectural foundation, you're going to run into some serious growing pains at some point in your company's life
@Jeremy Large technology projects require large-scale structure, and designing that aspect of the system doesn't necessarily require knowledge of any particular technology
if you tell me you really like microservices but can't tell me why they're a good idea (easier deployment, more testable, better integration testing, etc., etc.) then I'm just going to know you're spewing bullshit
@Codeman yeah but I can tell you about the pros and cons of microservices. That seems a hell of a lot more useful that graphs v trees in the real world
if I'm hiring for a startup, I want to see that you've completed projects with ambitious goals and aggressive deadlines.
If I'm hiring for a bluechips services based company, I want to see that you can build high quality code that is testable, maintainable, and usable by other people in the organization, and that you have the ability to recover from failures very gracefully
IMHO it's a false dichotomy. SoA was always about those things. If your services in the SOAP era were hard to scale, hard to test and tightly coupled, they were just bad services
my current model involves using separation of layers to deterine where code should live in the stack and separation of business domains to break down logical breaks in business process
@Failsafe So the thing is, managers tend to think that buying a single big thing is somehow better
Probably because they don't have to sign as many requisitions (It wouldn't surprise me to know that all the bullshit in this industry is literally because of that)
Even if it's incredibly expensive and doesn't do any of the things you want
@Codeman we can now take bits of info like a cookie for a website and use the credentials in that to determien the SSO account ... through that we can grant rights to other resources in other domains
I assume the distinction was between using the browser's built-in mechanism for maintaining session cookies and those usually just identify a session, and defining your own token format which you expect the API user to explicitly retain and insert into every request