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d3 for people who can't d3?
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# ? Dec 21, 2014 23:06 |
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# ? May 11, 2024 10:06 |
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MeruFM posted:d3 for people who can't d3? I guess so, it's kind of a middle ground between something like Tableau and D3
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# ? Dec 21, 2014 23:51 |
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d3, Readers Digest Condensed Version
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# ? Dec 22, 2014 03:40 |
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Dammit, everyone is still playing "hammer the merges and waste another goddamned day" AGAIN. We can't just go UAT -> QA -> PROD we have to ~merge the branches~ every loving time and some dipshit changed some whitespace between a parameter's getter/setters in our stupid snowflake ORM, and then people get mad and just mash "take whatever" and erase my changes in some markup that nobody else should have touched at all. I stayed late Friday helping the senior merge-doer and don't want to do that poo poo again. But that's not as bad as the poo poo I just did. I found a spaghetti octopus ratking of a compiled loving executable taking command line args to do things a power shell script should be doing. I found it when I was told to hack it so that it would fail silently if it did a query and found nothing when generating reports and emails/messages to send to BIG IMPORTANT CLIENTS. Because failing silently is apparently the best kind of failing. On top of it the way I did the hack is shameful but it's because even doing that right would take time up that would keep me from cranking out tickets. I'm fine with maintenance programming but holy poo poo I should get some kind of authority to say "this is BS" if my job is to do heart surgery on a big old behemoth. I actually feel a little dirty right now but not in the good way.
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# ? Dec 22, 2014 21:42 |
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for your vcs issues sounds like you need someone in charge of a central repo who reviews pull requests and has the power to reject if the coder can't address the review comments (ie don't commit files you didn't touch because your IDE formatted them). then you need a 'coding standard' so IDE auto formats don't gently caress your day. then you need to learn about -Xignore-all-space
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# ? Dec 22, 2014 22:07 |
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my stepdads beer posted:for your vcs issues sounds like you need someone in charge of a central repo who reviews pull requests and has the power to reject if the coder can't address the review comments (ie don't commit files you didn't touch because your IDE formatted them). then you need a 'coding standard' so IDE auto formats don't gently caress your day. then you need to learn about -Xignore-all-space We do use stylecop, but we also sometimes don't always... use it. Fuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuck
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# ? Dec 22, 2014 22:58 |
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Space Whale posted:We do use stylecop, but we also sometimes don't always... use it. gently caress tha police
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# ? Dec 22, 2014 22:59 |
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Space Whale posted:We do use stylecop, but we also sometimes don't always... use it. integrate it into your builds fool, and make warnings errors. gently caress anyone who disagrees
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# ? Dec 22, 2014 23:00 |
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there's a stylecop rule which says any use of #region is not allowed, which i don't really get. maybe that's why i'm in this thread!
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# ? Dec 22, 2014 23:20 |
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pointsofdata posted:there's a stylecop rule which says any use of #region is not allowed, which i don't really get. maybe that's why i'm in this thread! I LOVE changing branches and having VS just sit and hang with its teeth in its mouth while my regions won't let me expand, I tell ya w-hat.
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# ? Dec 22, 2014 23:59 |
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pointsofdata posted:there's a stylecop rule which says any use of #region is not allowed, which i don't really get. maybe that's why i'm in this thread! Your IDE should be able to collapse sections of the file without needing to pollute the file itself with junk that everyone else has to deal with. -- Also why the gently caress can't you just take your QA build and move it to production as-is? lol if you're manually merging things again to create your prod build, because now there's no guarantee that what was tested by QA is actually the same thing as what you're releasing. Whoever is in charge of your release process has hosed up big time.
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# ? Dec 23, 2014 00:04 |
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pointsofdata posted:there's a stylecop rule which says any use of #region is not allowed, which i don't really get. maybe that's why i'm in this thread! the only times i've seen #region in use (where it helped a lot) are really crazy dense codebases with poor soc and big nasty swiss army classes
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# ? Dec 23, 2014 00:12 |
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whats #region
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# ? Dec 23, 2014 00:31 |
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visual studios cool thing for cool guys
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# ? Dec 23, 2014 00:38 |
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Jabor posted:Your IDE should be able to collapse sections of the file without needing to pollute the file itself with junk that everyone else has to deal with. The guy who did it is new to git. FWIW we all miss TFS. Maybe we can go back to it.
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# ? Dec 23, 2014 00:48 |
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Space Whale posted:We do use stylecop, but we also sometimes don't always... use it. basically what I'm gettin from this thread from like a quick once-over of ur posts is that you deserve the pain you're experiencing
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# ? Dec 23, 2014 00:48 |
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Space Whale posted:The guy who did it is new to git. FWIW we all miss TFS. Maybe we can go back to it. it's not even a git thing, this is just basic release management. is the guy completely new to software development or something?
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# ? Dec 23, 2014 01:06 |
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trip report: i drove to their office, it's a nice place in a modern office building about an hour away at rush hour, 45 minutes otherwise. one of those big fountains in the middle so the whole place smells like chlorine. answered the dreaded whiteboard problem about recursive tree traversal. i was close with a little help but they seemed satisfied with my method (particularly impressed that I bothered defining what a node class was). the guy i talked to (their engineering manager) said close enough, just email him a solution by tomorrow. got shown around the office, talked about the job duties and future prospects, showed me some office amenities, there's a deli in the building, free snack bar, exercise machines, infinite soda/tea, etc. they were nice. went home and emailed them the solution. they emailed me back 15 minutes later saying they'd send me an offer letter in the mail.
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# ? Dec 23, 2014 23:26 |
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see how easy that was now counter their offer
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# ? Dec 23, 2014 23:30 |
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kickass, now negotiate for more bucks
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# ? Dec 23, 2014 23:31 |
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Luigi Thirty posted:trip report: grats. now Captain Foo posted:negotiate for more bucks especially since willing to send you an offer that quickly
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# ? Dec 23, 2014 23:34 |
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Luigi Thirty posted:trip report: nice dude
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# ? Dec 23, 2014 23:35 |
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another yospos success story
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# ? Dec 24, 2014 00:01 |
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dont rush into this though, what if its worse than your current retail position
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# ? Dec 24, 2014 00:59 |
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grats luigi personally I prefer to leave the hardball negotiations for when I'm currently employed, but ymmv
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# ? Dec 24, 2014 02:25 |
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congrats luigi, it's about time you stepped out of mario's shadow
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# ? Dec 24, 2014 02:26 |
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post the hard question, if you remember
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# ? Dec 24, 2014 02:50 |
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BONGHITZ posted:post the hard question, if you remember it wasn't hard once i wasn't trying to do it on a whiteboard in a conference room given a binary tree and a search number, write an algorithm that returns true if the sum of the values of the nodes in any traversal path equals the search number or false if no path matches the search number
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# ? Dec 24, 2014 03:29 |
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Use an exception to signal success and break out of the recurs ion
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# ? Dec 24, 2014 03:55 |
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Reply faaaaaaart because coding tests are dumb and bad
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# ? Dec 24, 2014 04:44 |
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my favorite dumb coding question that ive been asked is: Given an array of size n containing integers 0 through (n - 1), sort the array in place in an efficient manner like half my friends still cant answer it
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# ? Dec 24, 2014 04:55 |
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lmao holy crap my company is totally dysfunctional it owns
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# ? Dec 24, 2014 05:09 |
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fart simpson posted:lmao holy crap my company is totally dysfunctional it owns this except all companies
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# ? Dec 24, 2014 05:15 |
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Joe Law posted:my favorite dumb coding question that ive been asked is: array.sort()
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# ? Dec 24, 2014 05:15 |
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C# code:
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# ? Dec 24, 2014 05:19 |
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Bloody posted:Reply faaaaaaart because coding tests are dumb and bad they didn't care if it was code or pseudocode, they more wanted to watch you figure out how you'd do it i guess. i didn't get the full answer but they didn't care. they already asked me technical questions over the phone anyway (explain how a linked list works, what's the difference between a left inner join and an outer join, etc) Luigi Thirty fucked around with this message at 05:28 on Dec 24, 2014 |
# ? Dec 24, 2014 05:26 |
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shaggar has smashed through the problem like a terminator
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# ? Dec 24, 2014 05:27 |
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uncurable mlady posted:array.sort() [0, 1, 10, ..., 19, 2, 20, ...]
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# ? Dec 24, 2014 05:28 |
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or really theArray.length instead of n.
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# ? Dec 24, 2014 05:29 |
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# ? May 11, 2024 10:06 |
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Luigi Thirty posted:they didn't care if it was code or pseudocode, they more wanted to watch you figure out how you'd do it i guess. i didn't get the full answer but they didn't care. they already asked me technical questions over the phone anyway (explain how a linked list works, what's the difference between a left inner join and an outer join, etc) Didn't they ask you to email them the answer when you got home? What the gently caress is that. Maybe they don't know and are looking for help.
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# ? Dec 24, 2014 05:32 |