@HerNameIsEllie Depends on degree and location. I wanted 50k starting with a CS degree but could only get ~40ish where I'm at. If I was willing to move to a bigger city I think I'd have an easier time getting 50.
I've got 3 companies courting me, my current employer, and 2 other companies in Texas - USAA and ARGO. I just got an offer from my employer for $40k. Seems a little low.
I don't think they'll accept counter-offers/leverage. This is a relatively small company, so I don't know that they can afford more... I was just curious if this is a slap in the face, or average.
I think I would just be hired as a 'Programmer'. Like I said, this isn't an IT company, so they don't have super official titles. I basically do whatever is in my realm of knowledge/whatever needs to be done. And come May, I will have a Bachelor's in Computer Information Systems.
@robjb I was in Michigan, went to WMU for computer engineering. I was interviewing with companies like Amway, Stryker, Ford and getting offers for ~$60k... got an offer out in Seattle for $75k. I probably could have gotten more.
@RyanTernier @KyleTrauberman Okay, you two are properly circled. If you look through my post history you should see some posts where I talk about writing a site to Lews and Andre.
@robjb I ended up 3rd in the class for computer engineering, so I guess I'm above average. not crazy, though. but the 1st and 2nd ranked guys still don't have jobs, and I got a job over spring break... so there ya go
@LewsTherin That's not the kinda accent I was talking about lol ... what I heard was a recorded conversation between two elderly Brits, and there wasn't a word I could understand in the whole thing
I have to make a percentage from this string "0.5", it returns me correct format by parsing it, which is 50%, but if the user is from Finland for example, it will return 500%, it is correct to use System.Globalization.CultureInfo.InvariantCulture.NumberFormat in order to return 50% no matter what's his localization ?
@E.LDunn MS exams mean pretty much diddly squat here. Maybe at bigger companies. We care about previous projects and if you're BSing, or if you know what you're doing
Can anyone help me with my question, I've posted it 2 days ago.. http://stackoverflow.com/questions/13054708/what-is-the-best-way-to-route-paths-in-a-large-grid
for instance, if at some point you block, that doesn't mean there's no route, it just means that considering the previous routes we've chosen there's no more possibilities
I would try a modified version of the A* algorithm
Yeah but my current algorithm block only if there is no routes at all with the conditions and pairs I provided. I mean after trying all the available possibilities that's why it take a huge time if it is used in large grids
@zneak, I will try to use it in the next few days and I'll update my question, Thank you. But please if you find any related resources let me know.. :)