If you implemented a solution as in an entire program, then obviously you can't post it in the Answer box.
But then you write "I implemented this, and I use it now like this: <code of how to use the library>" ..and add some explanation of how it works and stuff :)
@OlegValter Yes. They were concerned that, because someone in the employee's family got very sick, he had started leaving 1 hour early from work several days a week, and that would reduce the well-being of the management.
Employee didn't quite understand the math... How leaving 1 hour early a few days a week (while often coming in 1-2 hours early every day) added up to half-time.
I don't quite understand it. Did they get someone else now? Or did they just put that work on the remaining people?
I imagine they wanted to pressure them to stay longer in the office.. but didn't realize that it wasn't going to happen. How do people like that get to management positions in the first place?
I see. But from what I understand they make promises to customers that they can't keep. They're unable to deliver anything. They drive people in the company to quit. How did they even get the company to the point there there's an actual revenue?
Also, before I started, we'd apparently gone massively into debt multiple times, and they've had to get multiple loans, generally personal loans from family and friends, not to mention their own money.
@Scratte Definitely! Which... isn't all bad or stupid. What's stupid about it is that they do this, yet simultaneously go promise to the customer that we have everything already and it all works and it's great.
I'm not counting testers.. I'm talking about the production part. The product.
The development work itself. (I'm not implying that testing isn't needed.. but testing requires something to test)
The testers, managers, cleaning personal, HR and all those other people are basically the second level and they are only needed because someone is making a product. Without a product, there's nothing.
It's kind of like it's really nice that there's a head and a secretary and someone makes food and another comes to clean in a hospital. But if there are no doctors or nurses, all those others are kind of moot.
@CodyGray ah, the venerable "have you tried turning it off and on" tradiition? :)
@Scratte then make your administrative stuff tend to patients too :) After all, they work in a clinic, they must know how to treat pneumonia? Works for most of IT, so why not there...
@OlegValter I've never minded doing that other stuff :) Talking directly to customers. Making project plans or budgets.. :) But, I think I'm lucky that I don't risk killing a patient doing it :D
greatest devs do that - I see them all the time on main: "I tried X, but it did not work" :) Most of the time the response in my head is "why on earth X could ever help you in this case?"
@Scratte I doubt people talking to customers and making plans will like doing development work, though :)
@OlegValter I do :) I actually prefer talking directly to customers. I don't much like the middle people giving me vague descriptions of that I need to do.
@OlegValter Yes.. :) They're actually less vague than after being interpreted. And if I don't understand what they want, I ask them.. and I keep asking and poking and digging. If I can't get any clarity, then I can't do it. I'll often ask why they need something and to explain the workflow they need it in.
@CodyGray btw, just so you know - the bot (the production version) should obey mod commands now. I think I failed to properly communicate how the access control system should work, and that basically lead to mods being downgraded partially (because the older approach was still used in some places) for a while :)
@CodyGray to Sam :) At some point the old version of how access was granted was removed without me noticing that it would imply populating the list of mods dynamically. So 'tis my fault :(
it is - well, let me demonstrate that it was a bug :) But I think you should either get access to the dashboard or have an explicit, not bug-induced way of doing that
@CodyGray Yes, but if you do a Bot say (room nr., "Scratte, don't be silly") so you really want the bot to join the room with that nr. if it's not already in that room?
@CodyGray yeah, definitely - that's what happens now with the dashboard - I am unsure what exactly the thoughts are on how it is supposed to work for mods now. say is definitely not a dev-only command, it is explicitly AccessLevel.privileged. I'll ask
@OlegValter Yes, sure. I just meant that it needs to not join the X room to do the say unless it's already in it. It would be quite odd for it to join the Python room and say "Scratte, don't be silly" just due to a typo in the chosen X :)
@CodyGray well, from what I learned over the years, it is not a very common occurrence :)
I think it reusability makes many feel like they are not working "hard enough" when instead they are missing out on the time they can spend learning how to do thing instead of gluing together boilerplate
@CodyGray darn, NPM missed out on a great marketing stick
@CodyGray yeah, and speeds up things too. Granted, it sometimes feels like "oh, well, that is all I needed to do to set it up? No pain in the ass for hours? Definitely something is off"
@OlegValter mmm, I never commented on that. Last time (and perhaps the first time) we spoke about how you perceive your country you expressed a negative image - perhaps with many due reasons of concern.
@OlegValter one argument...Between Yeltsin's time and now: How much did minimum wage increase? Wealth? Employment? etc... I think Russia has come a long way in a relatively short time.
Of course, wealth is no substitute for individual freedom, civil rights, guarantees. But, economic development has a way of bringing political change with it (hopefully for the better).
@bad_coder it is not hard to get an increase in wealth and employment if your starting point is a ruined country after 75 years of idiotic management :)
it is much harder to do so when oil prices are not 140$ a barrel anymore too
@OlegValter well, then you have a democracy to build. In Portugal fascism only ended in 74 with the Carnation revolution and in Spain sometime between 75-82 after Franco's death
Believe me, it's a several decade long process at the very least...
@bad_coder we don't anymore :) that ended in 2012 (admittedly earlier. And if we are honest, it ended right back then in year 2000), we are slowly building another USSR
@OlegValter for Russia the recent surge in Oil and Gas prices is actually excellent economically. You're looking two very profitable quarters right now.
@bad_coder yeah, I can recount the names of citizens by hand who are looking to be very profitable in the next quarters due to the surge in oil and gas prices :)
@bad_coder you are assuming these ballots matter :) but election fraud in my country is not something I can talk about without fear of later repercussions
@bad_coder I think you got our system wrong then, we are the banana republic model right now. It is exactly the way things work right now in my country. And it is horrible
@OlegValter hey, that's not exactly...2021 thinking...There are countries that can only afford to pay public servants another 3 months of salary before bankruptcy (the news is saying the US won't have money after Christmas.)
@OlegValter you understand that without gold reserves interest on foreign loans is so high the country goes into a state of only affording the interests on the debt?
@CodyGray well, you realize the poorest countries in the world buy US debt just because it has stability. If they need a quick cash flow they can sell.
@bad_coder my point is: gold reserves mean little when your government drives any innovation out with extremely convoluted laws, corrupted officials, puppet judges, and political charges should you not align with the mainline of the party.