A friend of mine once said when I was starting my career as a developer: the difference between a junior and a senior developer is how precise you ask things to Google
There is actual correlation between being attractive and higher pay and likelihood to get higher positions. Although it has to be backed by actual skill of course. But a pretty face is certainly an asset.
Love hearing some honesty from developers. I've heard so many up tight people before claim they hand code everything bosting and acting like they know everything...BS.
Thank you guys! I’ve been down a lot lately because I’m so hard on myself. Glad to know I’m not the only one that procrastinates like a boss. Got to be nicer to myself.
Great video. Thanks for the feedbacks / insights ! I started software engeneering 5 years ago at the age of 30, i wish i ve discovered your videos sooner !
Mateguys.. i like so much this vid.... this is the way u should do.. great atmosphere. Real humans , real people.. real stuff from life.. plus the delicious food (wish i could taste LD ) .. Really nice vibe from that... keep going mate.. appreciate the afford u put in the vids.. every video better and better.. good job .
The question at 8:19, as a student, university only teaches us the fundamentals of software engineering to be able to adapt on any situation. For instance, we don't learn every single data structure in the world to pass our data structure course, but you understand the fundamentals of a data structure to understand a suitable data structure that you need for a project: and this principle is applied for every course in my university (I don't know about how other universities works, but at University of Sherbrooke, Quebec, this is how teachers teaches us). Finally, to answer that question, pretty much everything will be new for you as you go out of university if you didn't do some personnal researches, and even if you did a shit ton of searches, there is a high chance that you won't be familiar on first sight with a certain aspect of your job. BUT, don't worry, if you understands the fundamentals, you won't find it hard to adapt :)
Попал случайно на канал. Это огонь! У нас в России тоже есть ребята которые весело шутят на тему программирования, но ты просто лучший! ) P.S. Специально написал по-русски, почему бы и нет? =)
That's one of the biggest advantages of working for a big tech company I think. There are just so many people that you can just don't give a shit about writing nice code and documentation, because there'll be another slave in the future taking the hassle for you.
Great vid. In your next Q&A, can you cover why you use vim and what benefits you have realised from using it? I am struggling to find reasons bar those which are trivial or hipster-appeal related; but, I'm conflicted, as it seems that every top-level coder uses either vim or emacs.