Details
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AboutStarted my professional career very young. 20+ years of experience. Been there, done that.
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SkillsC# .NET ASP.NET MVC WebAPI REST OOA OOD OOP HTML CSS JavaScript front-end back-end WCF LESS SASS jQuery React Angular XML XSLT Java
Joined devRant on 9/9/2016
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Some would say that is ADHD or ADD.
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@molaram wrong site? Well, it is a question, isn't it? So what's wrong about asking a question tagged as question?
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Following c# guidelines you should not name method arguments starting with _
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Dude just disable cache *poof* problem solved.
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Neither if you don't really need it.
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Sanitize input first is a lesson learned? I hope you haven't missed all those other lessons!
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Do you have a degree? In my country you cannot officially call yourself engineer if you didn't get that title. Companies unfortunately just give people such job titles. No offense intended, but there's an enormous difference between an engineer (whether or not full stack) and developer.
I know from experience and because I'm a full stack engineer. I love both front-end and back-end. To me, being full stack means that you are capable working on the full stack (duhh), which also includes creating a correct and optimal db design - or whatever technology you use. Next to that, I expect an engineer to be also capable of doing a requirements analysis, defining the (non)functional requirements, functional design, technical design, proper coding, testing, etc. etc. all that is included to get from idea to working application in a production environment, with an acceptable level of quality. -
But if you work like 80 hours a week doing flutter you'll even have more than 5 years experience!
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@shoop nah me too! I like both Windows and Linux though. And guess what? Shit happens on Linux too, although most linux fans don't seem very willing to admit that.
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🙂
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Retard coders like that unfortunately exist.
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@EzeKoren for the same reason you shouldn't name yourself 'CancerWhore' or 'ChildFucker' or 'NiggerKiller'etc. It has something to do wirh a thing that's called common sense.
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@childporn Why the fuck would you name yourself child porn??
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If he can't understand it without your help maybe he shouldn't be translating it to JS at all. I don't know how it is for other devs but I can pretty easily understand languages I haven't seen before. Yeah, no brainfuck or the like but just looking up some language specific features and trying to follow the code gets me there, at least to a point of a high level understanding.
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@-ANGRY-CLIENT- don't know who coded that fucker but I'm in for killing that dev up to 97%. Didn't happen after os reinstall though.
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It's not that bad. Not long ago I had the application compatibility telemetry process sucking up 97% CPU, effectively literally freezing my machine for 2 hours. The process kept kicking in a couple of minutes after rebooting and I noticed that my % disk was on 100! I have ssd and it was writing at full power around 555 mb/sec for the duration of that telemetry process. Managed to get the process disabled. And then the same shit happened in my dev vm running on same system. I ended up reinstalling my os as my system kept freezing over and over again. Mouse pointer was still responsive also num lock still responding, so it didn't hang but if you'd ctrl alt del it for many many times nothing would hapoen, except for task manager opening an hour later or so. First time ever that I had such issues with Windows 10. It wasn't fun.
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@runtimeTerror Your joke succeeded as it made me laugh :)
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What.The.Fuck.
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Better off.
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@linuxxx u can't stand 'u' yet u write idk
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It's auto-retarded.
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In many cases, there's not much math in applications, but, as always, it depends on the industry. Formal logic is a thing you will encounter very often, just a single condition in an if-statement is formal logic. However, advanced/more complex cases with many conditions are not found that often. Recently I was able to create a UI-component made up of several parts that needed to be shown/hidden depending on other component values. Approaching it mathematically solved all the issues we had with that component.
The most useful thing I got out of discrete mathematics is that it trained my abstraction abilities. I define better abstractions, easier than before and it also gave me a lot of different perspectives. As an example, consider a case where you need to validate a Dutch zipcode. One could use a regex, one could use string manipulations, and then some more but you could also create a very simple finite automaton that only accepts a valid zipcode. -
.net core for the world!
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There's no such thing as sprint 0.
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Yeah that's why I still do a lot myself in vanilla js. Why the fuck would you need al those fucking packages? Of course, when you need to pad a string, convert something to pascal case, etc, there's a module for that!
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That's just x-- > 0. Nothing goes to here.
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Your subconcious is trying to tell you something...
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Who wrote that? Send him/her back! Now!!
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@alexbrooklyn That would be nice yeah. I started needing glasses just a couple of years ago. Oh well, shit happens.
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Enjoy life without glasses while you still can.