vote up 0 vote down star
1

Hi All,

Technologies come and go but what are the key fundamentals concepts that defines a software engineer ? One that a 19 yrs old Software Engineer and 79 yrs old Software Engineer have in common.

flag

4  
Unfortunately, one of my key qualities would be "older than 19 but younger than 79". I'm an ageist - sue me. – MusiGenesis Sep 3 at 20:55
At least one of them is a great googler. – Jonas Elfström Sep 3 at 20:55
2  
Josh Bloch is a great Googler :) – Jon Skeet Sep 3 at 20:56
3  
This needs to be community wiki. – Gary Willoughby Sep 3 at 20:57

closed as subjective and argumentative by Mark Biek, MusiGenesis, OrbMan, Russ Cam, Shog9 Sep 3 at 21:34

6 Answers

vote up 4 vote down check
  • Communication skills (with the compiler, other developers, themselves later on)
  • Passion
  • Determination and patience
  • Curiosity
  • Precision in thought and expression
  • A logical mind but one which can also be intuitive
  • Empathy for the needs of others - even when they don't know what they need
link|flag
2  
So you argue that ENFP is better aligned with Software Engineering ;) – Mike Brown Sep 3 at 21:04
vote up 2 vote down
  1. Loves To Code
  2. Gets Things Done
  3. Continuously Refactors Code
  4. Uses Design Patterns
  5. Writes Tests
  6. Leverages Existing Code
  7. Focuses on Usability
  8. Writes Maintainable Code
  9. Can Code in Any Language
  10. Knows Basic Computer Science

http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/top%5F10%5Fsoftware%5Fengineer%5Ftraits.php

And some more

11. Design Patterns
12. Knowledge of UML (if dev)
13. Knowledge of Regular Expressions (if dev)
link|flag
I would say that these are some of the traits of a good Software Developer. – Jaimal Chohan Sep 3 at 21:12
1  
It would be pretty hard for anyone to not use design patterns, given that many design patterns are built into every modern language/platform. – MusiGenesis Sep 3 at 21:21
+1 For Design Patterns - added that to the list, thanks. – Thiyagaraj Sep 3 at 21:30
yes but you have to be careful not to create a "methodology". Good engineers have great tools and techniques at their disposal and the cognizance to use them when appropriate, and NOT use them when they are innappropriate. I've seen code where adapters are being visited by this that and the other, and the code was horrid and unmaintable. – Spence Sep 3 at 21:42
vote up 1 vote down

Basic understanding of the fundamentals of computer science: mathematics, algorithms, complexity, programming languages, operating systems (stuff that Donald Knuth would write about).

Languages, frameworks, and tools come and go, but these fundamental things never really change. (well, that is until something like quantum or biological computing blows away everything we know about computing.)

link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

I would say that the most important quality of a Software Engineer is continual self-improvement. Our industry is constantly evolving (not just new languages/frameworks/platforms but also new techniques), and if you're not committed to learn continuously, you are committed to obsolescence.

link|flag
vote up 4 vote down

INTJ

link|flag
2  
+1. Very interesting. I agree that INTJ (and, to a lesser degree, INTP) correlate well with software engineering aptitude. I'm not sure if it's a casual relationship or simply coincidental. – Daniel Pryden Sep 3 at 20:57
1  
Wow, Lenin and Ayn Rand in the same category. That's gotta be a first. – MusiGenesis Sep 3 at 20:57
Your saying that you have to be introverted to be a good software developer? I would VEHEMENTLY disagree with that, indeed I would find it almost offensive. – Spence Sep 3 at 21:39
What's wrong with introversion? – Gary Willoughby Sep 3 at 22:35
Nothing. I disagree that being introverted is a key or required attribute of being a software engineer. – Spence Sep 3 at 23:39
show 1 more comment
vote up 2 vote down

Great problem solving skills and a never ending drive to continue learning...even at 79 years old.

link|flag

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.