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I am working on some additions to an MVC app that the big dogs in the office have been building. I was told since they are so busy I am to do it with little to no help from them. However I am getting very confused on some basic things and I am afraid my project will start to become very delayed. Anyone have any advice? I am like seriously going to kill myself if I fail at this and get fired or slip down any farther down the ladder I am trying to climb. I have to get this thing done because it is business critical and a client is expecting it... Maybe I am jumping the gun and freaking out but I figured I would do it now rather than later and maybe get some advice on how to proceed from you all.

PS: Thanks for being here StackOverflowlings, you have answered so many of my programming questions and keep me employed haha, more so even than my coworkers >:D

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37% accept rate
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One way to be thankful (concerning your P.S.) would be to accept answers from all questions you have asked in the past ;) – Daok Sep 15 at 16:57
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I second that. It doesn't look like you have received a lot of help from SO if you only accepted 30% of your question's answers. – Philippe Leybaert Sep 15 at 17:01
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agreed, answers like that stackoverflow.com/questions/137326/… are totally valid and should be accepted – marcgg Sep 15 at 17:07
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Ryan, if there are multiple good answers, accept that one that you actually used, but be sure to upvote the other good ones. – Thomas Owens Sep 15 at 17:15
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@Ryan: when in doubt, hover your mouse over things. The SO team has done an outstanding job on usability and have provided tooltips on many page elements. Hovering over your "30% accept rate" reveals: "this user has accepted an answer for 36 of 119 eligible questions." – Ahmad Mageed Sep 15 at 17:35
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closed as subjective and argumentative by geowa4, Thomas Owens, gnovice, Godeke, MusiGenesis Sep 15 at 17:55

12 Answers

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quit. find a job where the others are willing and able to help.

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I've been at jobs where people were unable or too busy to help. Why are they paying you if all you can do is rely on others to do the work? Sometimes you need to go through some pain to get better at what you do. – rball Sep 15 at 16:59
idk it's a little unreasonable that he is given something critical and cannot get help. – geowa4 Sep 15 at 17:01
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They are probably just making it seem critical to "push" him a bit. They are most likely testing him to see what he can do with what he has. Course...they could just be dick-headed morons too, but then I would think he would have the sense to just leave and not ask questions on SO :) – rball Sep 15 at 17:11
"dick-headed morons" +1 on that. – geowa4 Sep 15 at 17:22
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If the project is that important and must be delivered, then it is reasonable to expect your co-workers to support you, and your manager should back you on this.

Otherwise, they are saying that it is not important (or that it is expected to fail).

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Agree, didn't think of the failure thing. Maybe they don't really care about the customer like he thinks they do. – rball Sep 15 at 17:00
"it is expected to fail" is exactly what I was thinking. This is a cynical viewpoint, but if Ryan's description is accurate, maybe the "big dogs" don't want Ryan to succeed. @Ryan, learn what you can, better yourself by doing their work, and try to ignore the impossibility of your situation. Also, prep your resume. – drfloob Sep 15 at 17:05
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It can't be that business critical if they've told you not to talk to anyone and they are leaving it to a junior developer. They should be able to give you 10 minutes of time to clear up the few issues you have if you need it. Just don't come to them asking "How does MVC work" as there are a lot of tutorials out there that show you how.

I would say first google the issue you are having, maybe ask a specific question here to further your progress, and work towards it without getting too worked up. If that fails, then go ask them, no matter what "they" said.

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I know when I was first starting out, I would go home confused every evening and fire up the machine at home and google, seek out examples and tutorials in the dev stack I used at work and wrote as much code as possible. I'm still not a rock star, but I can talk at the senior dev's level at work with just a few years experience. Don't stop learning once you get home, especially if you are having trouble keeping up at the office.

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I second Matthew - it's important to spend your time at home to go through some of the things you struggle with at work. That way, you can easily catch up and improve your basic programming skills. Most of us do bigger chunk of our developments at home. Again, as long as you have access to the internet, just post your question (as long as you're not expecting a solution in its entirety) you will get assistance. Good luck – Helen Neely Sep 15 at 17:07
If only I had time to do this when I get home, I need to cook, clean, and do school work. Not to mention some bills somewhere probably need to be paid. – Ryan Sep 15 at 17:40
I definitely get that. I had to drop school to pursue my education, as odd as that sounds. And now that I have my career on track, it's time to go back and get that piece of paper. – Matthew Vines Sep 16 at 15:37
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If stackoverflow is answering your questions more than your co-workers, I would just keep getting your help here! :) Communication is key too, I know when I am getting in a bind it's better to take a deep breath and swallow your pride and ask the simple questions. Better than getting overwhelmed and asking at the last minute...

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I was told since they are so busy I am to do it with little to no help from them.

I would begin a job search. I would not want to work in a company where this type of attitude is considered "acceptable".

Short of that, it' hard to answer the question without knowing what you're struggling with. Is it specific to the business, or to you need to learn how to do the actual programming? If it is business specific, you're not going to have much luck.

The best advice I have is to map out your processed ahead of time, filling in what you know, and leaving big question marks where you are unsure, and when you do go and ask for help, show them that you did the diligence to plan as much as you could, and that you identified the pieces you absolutely cannot get on your own. That should ease their annoyance at being bothered.

Sounds like a fun work environment.

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If management don't think that, as a new dev, you deserve help then this is a weird way to manage! You should talk to them and explain them why you're having trouble.It's understandable that senior dev are busy, but if taking an afternoon to help you ends up with you being really productive, that's worth it. There's no point in hiring people if no one show them how to do things.

If management is too stubborn, consider using SO a lot more or quitting :)

You could also tell them "I can't get this simple thing to work. I'm sure that X knows that and 10 minutes of his time will save me a day of work"... this might convince them. I had the same problem at a company I worked at and this convinced them to give me a couple of hours to talk with the lead dev about details I didn't get.

But once you get the 101 course you shouldn't have to ever ask them again, so take notes!

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+1 for avoiding the need to ever ask the same thing twice. – ChrisW Sep 15 at 17:42
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Go talk to the project-manager and tell him exactly what you have written in your question. (It will count as a positive.) Then ask for some time to be set aside daily or weekly with one or more of the senior developers where you can discuss your coding problems and get some guidance.

In the very remote possibility of the PM reacting negatively, my opinion is that you would then be better off finding a position elsewhere. (Such a negative reaction would point to inexperience/incompetence in the PM, and will most likely have a negative impact on your career.)

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I am to do it with little to no help from them

"Little help" isn't the same as "no help"; and the first bits of help are more valuable than the next bits of help.

Perhaps you could ask for a budget: for example, can you have 20 minutes of help per day? 1 hour per week? More? Less?

Having some kind of budget might let you manage that resource (and let them manage that demand):

  • Some (a lot) of your time may need to be spent learning what you can learn by yourself (especially things which aren't specific to that particular app)

  • Some (a little) of their time could be profitably spent advising you on app-specific details which you can't learn from other (public) sources.

Furthermore, as a junior developer you ought to have a team leader and/or project manager who can at least clarify what they expect of you, and either help you get the resources (e.g. other people) that you need or give you permission to take longer than it would have taken you if you had had those resources.

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They didn't say no help, they said little to no help.

Therefore, make use of their time carefully, only after you have exhausted other resources. You can figure out how to do things via:

1) google 2) help information 3) msdn 4) books 5) sites such as stackoverflow

Only if the problem is specific to your work environment or company or existing applications should you need to go to them.

If you do ask for their help, take the time to write a carefully worded, succinct, accurate email. This will also save a lot of their time.

If you follow these guidelines, I don't think you will be turned down or fail. They probably just don't want you running to them with trivial questions that you could have figured out yourself.

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Don't worry too much about looking ignorant. We all are in that state for the first few months at a new job.

If you really are that conflicted, go back to your manager and ask them what to do. Better yet, say you have some questions and ask them who it is OK to go to in order to get the answers. Perhaps they have someone other than those who must not be disturbed who you can go to for basic questions.

There might even be some documentation they can point you to which they forgot to mention. You won't know until you ask.

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A lot of answers are assuming that management, or coworkers, or the office culture are the problem. While I agree that that's possible, and even likely, sometimes it's not everybody else, it's you. The sense of anxiety and desperation conveyed by the question reminds me of a situation I once witnessed where a programmer just wasn't quite cutting it. He spent a lot of other people's time asking very basic questions and never really managed to produce anything on his own.

After trying a few different approaches to get this guy up to speed, management eventually lost patience with his lack of progress and gave him an assignment similar to yours: something fairly important with a strict, but reasonable, deadline and instructions not to bother the other developers unless absolutely necessary. They were trying to find out just what this guy was actually capable of as a programmer.

Ryan, I'm not trying to be mean, and I sincerely wish you the best, but you might want to consider the possibility that you're in a similar situation, and if so, treat this as an opportunity to prove yourself. If you've previously had access to other developers and spent a lot of time trying to get up to speed, you may be hitting the point where your employer expects you to be able to pull a little more of your own weight.

You say you're "getting very confused on some basic things", but don't let that throw you. Basic things are, by definition, basic, so you should be able to find good tutorials etc. Others have given good answers on how to proceed on the technical front, but if you suspect that this is some sort of evaluation, then the key is to respect other people's time and ask smart questions that demonstrate what you've learned or tried on your own. Good luck!

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