Research explodes myth that older programmers are obsolete

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Re: Research explodes myth that older programmers are obsole

Post by Xamonas Chegwé » Thu May 09, 2013 2:13 am

rEvolutionist wrote:
rasetsu wrote:Soylent green is coders!


I have my own viewpoint on matters. In the 70s, programming as a field was booming and there was lots of money to be had. So every cloven hooved idiot from the Ozarks decided that being a programmer was the way to get rich. So thereafter the field was inundated with a bunch of clueless gold diggers, dropping the average competence in the field like a rock. And now today we're reaping the results of that gold rush in the form of tech that doesn't work, programs that violate basic design principles and just basic shit in IT. Maybe it's not that older programmers can't learn so much as that the younger ones never could learn.
That's not programmers fault. Most programmers I know are still uber-geeks. The problem is with the business model being used these days.
Yep - her tits ain't big enough. And she doesn't pout. What kind of a model can't pout? :nono:
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Re: Research explodes myth that older programmers are obsole

Post by Warren Dew » Fri May 10, 2013 4:12 am

klr wrote:The early 90's being the good old days? Nah, that's much too late for that. The "good old days" of programming were when at least 90% of programmers looked like this:

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Those guys could actually code, though.

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Re: Research explodes myth that older programmers are obsole

Post by Gawdzilla Sama » Fri May 10, 2013 9:50 am

Pappa wrote:
rachelbean wrote:I love Stack Overflow :swoon:
Stack Overflow is teh awesomez.
I guess she was talking about your stack? :naughty:
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Re: Research explodes myth that older programmers are obsole

Post by Azathoth » Fri May 10, 2013 10:08 am

Pappa wrote:
rachelbean wrote:I love Stack Overflow :swoon:
Stack Overflow is teh awesomez.
Got me out of the shit many times :biggrin:
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Re: Research explodes myth that older programmers are obsole

Post by klr » Fri May 10, 2013 10:22 am

Warren Dew wrote:
klr wrote:The early 90's being the good old days? Nah, that's much too late for that. The "good old days" of programming were when at least 90% of programmers looked like this:

Image
Those guys could actually code, though.
:kingdp:
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Re: Research explodes myth that older programmers are obsole

Post by Cormac » Fri May 10, 2013 11:17 am

The other problem of course, with coders young and old, is that while they can produce remarkable technology - more often than not, it is incapable of resolving the initial problem. Customers don't know what they want, and the skill is in discovering the nature of the problem, and making sure that the solution resolves the problem.

In my experience, most coders jump to conclusions, and don't take the time to analyse the problem to really work out how best to address it.

(This failure in the diagnosis/design activity is why >70% of IT/Change projects fail to succeed. Successfully launching bug-free code is not a success, if it is not fit for purpose).
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Re: Research explodes myth that older programmers are obsole

Post by klr » Fri May 10, 2013 11:20 am

Cormac wrote:The other problem of course, with coders young and old, is that while they can produce remarkable technology - more often than not, it is incapable of resolving the initial problem. Customers don't know what they want, and the skill is in discovering the nature of the problem, and making sure that the solution resolves the problem.

In my experience, most coders jump to conclusions, and don't take the time to analyse the problem to really work out how best to address it.

(This failure in the diagnosis/design activity is why >70% of IT/Change projects fail to succeed. Successfully launching bug-free code is not a success, if it is not fit for purpose).
Very true, but some of them also fail because many IT vendors are just out to make money by screwing their hapless customers. [/mini-rant]
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Re: Research explodes myth that older programmers are obsole

Post by Mysturji » Fri May 10, 2013 12:14 pm

I can remember spending a weekend fixing a mangled abortion of a fucked-up wankjob of an attempt at programming by the new young'un rising star fresh from 4GL School. His code was a fucking abomination. He apparently had the attention span of a goldfish. He would start a new function before he'd finished writing the previous one. Nested fucking functions for fuck's sake. If you could call that tangled mess of alphanumerics a "nest".
And this is at the same place where shortly after I joined, a senior (though younger in age than me) colleague and I had the following conversation:
{I had just come from a UNIC & C environment to a Fortran & VMS environment)
Me: How do you do a for loop in Fortran?
Colleague: What?
Me: What's the syntax for a for loop?
Colleague: What's a for loop?
Me: *pause* OK, any kind of loop... "do while"?
Colleague: *blank stare*
There followed an explanation of what a for / while loop was, followed by...
Colleague: That sounds like bad programming practice to me. I'd advise you to use a GOTO
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Re: Research explodes myth that older programmers are obsole

Post by Pappa » Fri May 10, 2013 12:48 pm

:hehe:

They introduced GOTO into PHP a while ago. :nono:

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Re: Research explodes myth that older programmers are obsole

Post by Azathoth » Fri May 10, 2013 12:59 pm

Pappa wrote::hehe:

They introduced GOTO into PHP a while ago. :nono:


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Outside the ordered universe is that amorphous blight of nethermost confusion which blasphemes and bubbles at the center of all infinity—the boundless daemon sultan Azathoth, whose name no lips dare speak aloud, and who gnaws hungrily in inconceivable, unlighted chambers beyond time and space amidst the muffled, maddening beating of vile drums and the thin monotonous whine of accursed flutes.

Code: Select all

// Replaces with spaces the braces in cases where braces in places cause stasis 
   $str = str_replace(array("\{","\}")," ",$str);

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Re: Research explodes myth that older programmers are obsole

Post by Cormac » Fri May 10, 2013 2:24 pm

klr wrote:
Cormac wrote:The other problem of course, with coders young and old, is that while they can produce remarkable technology - more often than not, it is incapable of resolving the initial problem. Customers don't know what they want, and the skill is in discovering the nature of the problem, and making sure that the solution resolves the problem.

In my experience, most coders jump to conclusions, and don't take the time to analyse the problem to really work out how best to address it.

(This failure in the diagnosis/design activity is why >70% of IT/Change projects fail to succeed. Successfully launching bug-free code is not a success, if it is not fit for purpose).
Very true, but some of them also fail because many IT vendors are just out to make money by screwing their hapless customers. [/mini-rant]

:hehe: Funny cos it's true.

I take great pleasure in hauling out the Statement of Work, and comparing to what was delivered, and then taking the razor to the invoice... I did it to a number of the large consultancies when I was in London. Heh. They didn't like it up 'em.
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