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- Path: news.sover.net!news
- From: sstryker@sover.net (Stew Stryker)
- Newsgroups: comp.lang.c++
- Subject: Re: CODE AS A CAREER:
- Date: Thu, 21 Mar 1996 08:10:21 -0400
- Organization: Southern Vermont Network
- Message-ID: <19960321121021.sstryker@sover.net>
- References: <4in2ol$cb@news2.ios.com> <1996Mar20.092247.20331@ned.cray.com>
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-
-
- >I my short 10 yrs as a programmer/system admin/developer I have come to
- >realize that it's not the language you use as your tool of construction,
- >it's the software engineering skills. Master your fundamental software
- >skills and your will be set to learn what ever flavor of tool is out
- >there.
-
- Don't tell college students this, otherwise they'll saturate the market
- with good development skills! Let them take 4-5 course on different
- languages in college and think they can compete by having an overview of a
- smattering of languages! That'll keep the job market in good shape for
- those of us who've learned what you're promoting the hard way! There's no
- better teacher for that kind of thing anyway.
-
- [BTW, for those of you with very serious minds, I'm being sarcastic here.]
-
- Short true story: A new contract programmer who was pretty fresh out of
- college was starting in the IS group I was in. Thinking I'd be friendly
- and find out more about him, I said "So Larry, what's your favorite
- programming languages?" He replied, "Well, I've had classes in BASIC,
- COBOL, FORTRAN and C." Shaking my head I said, "No Larry, I didn't mean
- just which were your familiar with. I wondering more of which one you
- liked best, and why." His reply? "Well, I've had course in BASIC, COBOL,
- FORTRANS and C...."
-
- Well, at least I thought this was hysterical, and indicative of what many
- BSCS graduates come out with.
-
- One tip I will pass on that's served me well. If you learn a language that
- has a long, steep learning curve, and you become an expert in it, really
- groking it, you'll always be able to find a job. You may have to travel
- the country (or even Australia) to find that job, but there will always be
- one there for you. And you'll be able to get a generous salary, because
- companies will choose this language and not be able to find programmers to
- maintain or enhance their systems. This gets particularly true as the
- language nears end-of-life.
-
- Anyone else out there still fluent in DEC RALLY (now Oracle RALLY)? No?
- Thought not.
-
- Stew
-