The interview yesterday was pretty straightforward, my boss talked to client boss-of-boss, who talked to client boss prior to that. Basically the message forwarded to me was that I was expected to wake the fuck up. I said it was hard when promised to do .NET and getting 2 months of studying papers and scripts, also this complaint came after doing 2 things: a VB6 window (no complaint) and the script.
I was told there were 2 phases, phase 1 is all this BS, when it's over I can move forward to phase 2.
and phase 2 is .NET MVC apparently, so I'm not gonna work with any top-notch tech in the best case scenario.
of course, being emotially down due to all my expectations blowing up in front of my face is no excuse for being incompetent, so I apologized for that. Appart from this, I'm simply afloat.
If they ask why you're leaving, "Because I'm not doing the work that was advertised to me when I Joined. You asked me to wake up & I did, which is why i'm leaving. "
Don't put up with that bullshit just to prove something to yourself. Rather prove to yourself that you can do this line of work and actually enjoy yourself doing it..
I was the devil in my previous job's end. HR would threaten me to black list me on HR boards. I got the "expected to wake the fuck up" too. Next job first year: Employee of the Year...
There are so many things swirling around in my head right now... part of my fear is that I've quitted several jobs right now, I didn't like hard enough to stay, so am I really doing this wrong?
So then you have the ability to say, "That gap is because I left the job that was not best suited for me, so I left and started working on things in the meantime (show example of project or whatever here)"
@Neil Does that sentence means that "I have a child class and 1 method in base class as virtual or abstract.Now i cant change implementation of that method at runtime because i have already define implementation at runtime"
@ILoveStackoverflow I think it just means that if your existing method returns a string in all caps, and you want it to instead return a string in lower caps, you can't simply "redefine" the method at runtime
@kame junit is very very similar to nunit, yeah
you'll probably do fine, just don't bite off too much to start
you should probably look into the jvm library, since that is very important to familiarizing yourself with java
The implementation of a subclass becomes so bound up with the implementation of its parent class that any change in the parent's implementation will force the subclass to change.
So I'm trying to automate our update, but I can't find how, also since this question only got a big hack as answer.
We have multiple servers, so it's tedious to do it all by hand.
We currently do file system publish to one server, and then manually copy to the other servers. Is there any way to ...
Well getting a good CI/CD pipeline is a long fiddle I am afraid, took me a good 3 years to get us where we are today, I had to canvas and get minds on board and sell it.
This company was in the process of implementing the pipeline when I started here. They're generally open to good ideas, since they want to keep being the market leader.
With nullable reference types in C# 8.0 when we add for example string in parameters action (like public IActionResult Index(string text, int number) text is assigned to null without warnings (when we not pass text in request)
@CaptainSquirrel Gah I have same pain, get issue reported from service desk. Well did you check the logs? I don't have access to production! Get me the log maybe I can help
I've got a ListView of object, if i push in a button in each element, it sends to another view , there, i can change a property of the element, i have a save button and it also save it in the object, but when i goes back with PopAsync, it isn't uploaded , so i have to get back and reload the ListView to get the property uploaded
There should be a process in place to request and get access if anything happens, but customer's production data should only be accessible by the customer via the code, not by an employee of the service provider.
Not without some sort of clearly delineated and audited process.