Possible Duplicate:
What is your longest-held programming assumption that turned out to be incorrect?
What do you consider to be the most harmful misconception about programming from people who are new to programming that you have seen?
Possible Duplicate:
What is your longest-held programming assumption that turned out to be incorrect?
What do you consider to be the most harmful misconception about programming from people who are new to programming that you have seen?
Re-inventing standard library functions/classes.
After going through a language book/tutorial, most beginners - knowing how to handle strings and numbers - will invent their own date functions, their own 'compression algorithms', their own SORT implementations.
Oh, and they always spend their first day searching for clrscr();
.
clrscr()
. darn!
Jul 16, 2009 at 18:13
That because their program compiles and runs it does what they expect it to do.
That if their code doesn't compile or work, it is because of a bug in the compiler.
Maybe not the most harmful, but they usually can't estimate how long stuff will take to be done, they think it can be done much faster than it really must(including me).
As for harmful stuff, good companies usually keep beginners away from where they can do much harm. They are usually encouraged to work by someone more experienced, so they can learn better.
That if their program works on their own computer, then it will work on everybody else's computer too.
"But it works on my machine!"
That programming is all about the syntax. Turns out it is all about problem solving.
That the user is a programmer.
Thinking if it doesn't look horribly complicated it must be wrong or "bad" code.
I must admit years ago in school I was guilty of thinking my programs didn't look complicated enough! These days I want to cry if something doesn't turn out as simple as:
//start
if(something)
{
do_stuff();
}
//go home
:P
"The problem is not in my program, it's a bug in the library / OS / language."
"It worked on my machine! What is wrong with yours?"
"Everything is a pattern, you just have to find them."
"I don't need to test because I only made a one line change."
"Source control is a waste of time for this project."
The real problem I've seen with programming tyros is "programming is magic", meaning not truly groking that the computer will operate exactly logically, and will do exactly the same thing every time given the exact same input.
They write something that they think should sort of does what they want, and then when it doesn't work, rather than try to approach the problem logically, they start changing things semi-randomly, hoping, apparently to appease the gods of computer magic by their sheer tenacity or willingness to abase themselves upon the altar of whimsy. They feel that the computer is capricious, and changes things randomly, and the best they can hope for is to get things to a vague approximation of working, and hope the stars stay aligned for long periods.
Of course, even to experienced programmers, it can feel that way sometimes, but there is an inherent knowledge that what is happening is happening for a specific reason, and you just have to dig down to get to that reason.
That you have to have design patterns in your code.
That their solution is the One and Only True Way To Solve The Problem, and everyone else is just dumb and wrong.
most harmful misconception (financial version):
"That a college education is required to know or have understanding about how to write software."
"I am going to make a ton of money by playing with computers!"
Edit: Another one that drives me nuts:
"The other guy's code isn't calling mine correctly, so it's not my fault the system doesn't work." -- with no proactive investigation, diagnosis, suggested patch, nothing. As a manager or a team leader, this really gets under my skin.
The worse misconception I've encountered, and the hardest to be rid of, is that programming is writing code, and not reading it.
That you have to use every feature of the language you are learning, inheritance above all.
Updated: be obsessive about assembly inline code in C
That cool == usable.
Disabusing them of the notion that "perfect but very late" is better than "acceptable and on time".
No one is going to care if some weekly report runs in 5 seconds rather than 8 if it is two months late.
It has something to do with computers.
That their code doesn't need to be documented. They're the only ones who will ever look at it, right?
The most common misconception is that you can write an application by starting your favorite IDE/editor and then write code immediately.
Yes, it will create an application. Yes, it's probably cr@p too when you're finished...
You start developing software by first creating a design. Preferably with pen and paper or with some useful tools on your computer. Writing the actual code just happens to be a small part of the whole process. (If not, you're doing something wrong!)
The most harmful misconception is to assume that people in software industry know what they're doing. Beginners tend to trust everything written in product's documentation, they trust error messages and exception descriptions. They even trust stuff posted on blogs.
That all there is to it is building cool new stuff everyday. Maintenance IS a part of programming!
That the hard part is typing in the code. The farther up you go, the more that comes to be the easy part.
Early on:
Later on:
Wrongly thinking that...
That garbage collection will save you from resource management.
Endianness? Padding? I can't just write(), send(), etc. the whole struct?
Wrongly thinking that:
That the program has to be correct the first time.
Fail fast, early, and often. It's the only way to get better.
That they will "break" something!
Or, to define "newcomers" as those that don't do it, "It'll be easy to change! It's software!"
cheers,