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As someone that will be applying for jobs in the near (immediate) future, I'd like to get some perspective on the differences between academia and the software industry. As I've never taken an internship all I've known are school and personal projects.

What is the biggest difference between college and the "real" world? What surprised you the most when you got out? Is there anything you wish you'd have known?

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closed as off topic by Jeremy Banks, ChrisF, jrturton, Lord Torgamus, John Saunders Jan 24 at 18:38

Questions on Stack Overflow are expected to generally relate to programming or software development in some way, within the scope defined in the faq.

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The proportion of existing code to new code that you'll be dealing with.

People come out of college expecting to write a lot of stuff from scratch and having the skills to do just that.

Unfortunately, they'll spend a significant amount of their time learning and integrating into existing codebases. An endless source of trouble they are ill prepared for...

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Just how horrible most programmers really are.

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And the truth is that you yourself will be horrible. Not because you are bad. But often corporate priorities necessitate horribleness to get something done. Companies tend to care jack about elegant design and just want it done yesterday.... – Cervo Oct 18 '08 at 14:44
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Some shops are better and emphasize good design, abstraction, UML, great architecture....And it comes from the top. There are many more that just want results now. Also QA helps code quality too. That is often one of the first things to go bye bye in tight deadlines.... – Cervo Oct 18 '08 at 14:47
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I had this response in my textbox but didn't submit as I didn't want to be aggressive. You are a bolder man than I am. – Haoest Dec 2 '08 at 21:48
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That most businesses aren't run with logic, or that the people who run them don't really know what's going on. It sounds disheartening, but it took me a while to get used to the number of bad mistakes that people make that could easily be fixed by thinking a little more about the day to day operations of things.

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I can't verify that about 'most' businesses, since I've only worked a few businesses, but there can be a disparity between what development would do, what designers would do, what management would do, and what the client would have you do. – MrBoJangles Oct 18 '08 at 5:31
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There are also unrealistic expectations that people may have. They may give you a task that is impossible to do. In college most projects are doable, in fact they have been done semester after semester...In the business world there are no guarantees..so you have to watch closely and communicate. – Cervo Oct 18 '08 at 13:52
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The lack of professionality all around.

When I was studying I had this idea that when you got to be a "professional", things would get done the way they were supposed to, because money was on the line. The reality is things get done as cheaply as possible, because money is on the line. The amount of corner-cutting that happens "in the real world" would get you flunked if you tried to pull it at school. I'm not even talking about just the programming side of things. Corners get cut in all aspects of business by even the largest multinationals.

Also, the absolute shamelessness with which turds get polished. I've seen products that get sold at thousands of dollars for a single license, with fancy websites that portray them as an industry leader, and that had code that could only be classified as embarassing.

It's made me a strong believer in open source, or at the very least the concept of selling the source along with the product. If they can cut corners and hide that fact, they will.

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I was just about to write an answer like yours. One vote is not enough. ;) It was a real eye opener to me when I realized that the world isn't run like tuned clockwork but rather like the temporary contraptions you build at home with duckt tape and scrap parts. – John Nilsson Oct 18 '08 at 21:32
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How often non-programmer managers make decisions about languages, platforms, or anything else that they know little about.

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This one's a killer. I wish I could give it more votes. – wbowers Oct 18 '08 at 8:00
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You mean I can't have my website implemented in Swing, MySQL, Ruby on Rails, AJAX, SQL Server 2008, ASP.NET with F#? What they are mutually exclusive... – Cervo Oct 18 '08 at 14:55
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That people consider ugly, unmaintable, unoptimized, plain-stupid code OK as long as it runs and produces the desired result.

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Ugly, unoptimized, and stupid don't matter if it produces the desired result. Unmaintainable, really means difficult to maintain, which means you have a job. – postfuturist Oct 18 '08 at 4:11
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And the funny thing is that most of the time it is good enough. As far as optimization. Often code starts great and then as it is used for purposes not intended it gets a ton of patches that turn it ugly. This "ugly" seems to be called "The Real World" :) – Cervo Oct 18 '08 at 14:53
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A working code is worth a thousand non-working ideas. – Vardhan Varma Mar 13 '09 at 18:55
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If you wish to create beautiful things, go paint. I don't believe in the "beauty of code". Just the one that can be written in a reasonable time and it works, and the one that can't and doesn't. – ldigas Sep 22 '09 at 18:50
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I would say the actual percentage of my time spent writing code is lower than I would have expected. It's different everywhere I suppose, but I spend a lot of time gathering and disambiguating requirements, running design ideas past fellow developers, and just dealing with overhead in general. When I get to actually sit down and code, it's a treat.

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Don't forget debugging, creating installations and testing. – Lev Oct 18 '08 at 5:42
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How important estimation is. Knowing how long something will take to develop+test+integrate is really important to the business.

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And that's one of the hardest things to do as a software developer, IMO! – Pistos Oct 18 '08 at 3:42
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Important and impossible. – postfuturist Oct 18 '08 at 4:12
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The problem is they don't want to accept the answer hmm let me take some time to figure this out. They take an estimate, then revise the requirements and hold you to that estimate.....Even though you estimated a totally different project. – Cervo Oct 18 '08 at 14:57
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How important communication and people skills are.

In college, you can walk away from the people you don't like or don't understand. You get together with your clique and friends. Others you don't like you just avoid, or you may decide to pick on them or even get in a fight with them or the other clique.

At work, you are expected to work with everyone on a professional level. You are expected to put a certain amount of your self-centered ego aside, and be polite, forthcoming, accurate, factual, friendly, helpful to the people you work with. Most of all: not taking things personal nor making your job a personal issue. Not talking behind the backs of others about their bad work, bad mouth, bad behavior, bad smell, bad ideas.

That's not something one necessarily learns in school or college. To the contrary.

Over time, you will find that there will be people around you that you like personally but actually are nothing but trouble for your job. There's people so grumpy you don't even want to approach them, but yet your job requires that the two of you sit together several times a week. There's people who would totally agree with you but you spend a full ten minutes discussing a subject without realizing that you want the same thing, you're just expressing ideas differently. There will be people that will give you a scary feeling simply by entering the room, and you'll be relieved it's someone else they want to talk to. There will be the factual leader who gives you the feeling he's setting you up for failure, questioning you and you get nervous every time he's only walking by. There will be the jerk who is actually kind of nice, but whenever you're spending lunch together you can't help but think that the others may look down upon you just by being his company. There's of course the guy who is intimidating, shouting in meetings, placing the blame. You don't want to get anywhere near him when he's "in a mood". But you have to.

These are just some of the social situations you will find yourself in when you pick up a job.

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The last part, sounds very much like in academia. – bjarkef May 22 '10 at 9:45
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The most important skill for a beginner is ability to debug/understand someone else's code.

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Well, several things did surprise me:

    - the fact that you will write code in more languages that you know when you graduate
    - the fact that you will read a lot of other people's code, either to see if it can reused or to fix bugs for it
    - the fact that CVS/SVN/RCS/GIT are not just words, are tools you'll love to use (although you never used them in college)
    - the fact that the client has no idea what it wants
    - the fact that despite the above, the client will demand a specific technology to be incorporated in the project
    - the fact that despite all of the above, I still like programming
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I hate to say it, but what surprised me most was the sexism.

When I was in school, the gender ratio for the tech classes I was in was roughly 50-50. I thought since technology was such a modern thing, the people that were into it would be modern thinking about everything. Boy was I wrong!

I realize tech is a male dominated field, but I never thought that would mean I have to be ten times better at programming than the men I work with in order to be even given a chance or taken seriously.

I love to code, but if I knew the industry was like this, I would have chosen another career path and coded just for fun.

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What school were you in where the gender ratio was roughly 50-50? – Dour High Arch Dec 2 '08 at 21:51
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I'm jealous of 50:50! It was 10% at my uni. It's one reason why I spent a year as a teaching fellow. – Donnelle Apr 23 '09 at 3:21
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A guy upvoting this. I haven't seen this first hand, but you are spot on about the ratios. My classes in the 80's were more like 70-30, but in my entire career I think I've worked with 3 female programmers (and two were on my first job). Something has to have gotten rid of them all, and that would make sense. – T.E.D. Sep 16 '09 at 22:37
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You will start to "get" most of the Dilbert cartoons you see. You will then also realize that most of them are based on truth.

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As programmers, we sometimes fail to see the bigger picture - the one that goes beyond the project or product we are working on. Sometimes, you have to do things that seemingly make no sense, but do make sense when a business is viewed as a whole.

Good programmers see it as an art, but business and art are two different things.

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Having to sacrifice quality, features, good coding standards and general perfectionism to get things done in time.

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The fact that the amount of time and effort spent in testing is sometimes greater than coding.

And also that testing increases the value of ugly code.

You'll also be amazed at the amount of friction you may have to endure to fix a bug by just deleting one line of code. There may be a 48 hour overhead to do a 1 minute bug fix...

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One thing I've found disheartening is the seeming failure of object-orientation as a paradigm, yet the outstanding success of object-oriented languages. I get stomach pains every time I'm forced to write procedural Java at work.

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Four points

  1. Most of your university classes will probably not apply directly to on the job. There are exceptions (computer gaming, scientific simulations, etc.). But for a typical hook up the ASP.NET web app to a database you will not be using much more than basic programming and algebra. In data structures you will use lists and maybe hash tables. Again there are exceptions. Google and Microsoft do a lot of cutting edge stuff as well. But to be in a position to apply all that knowledge right out of school may not be realistic. One exception is database class. There is a lot of stuff on normalization that may come in handy later in your career. If you covered the implementation of a database system that stuff is not so important. How to write queries and SQL will probably be something you use quite frequently.

  2. There is a really good chance you will not be working for a software company. Financial Companies, Market Research Companies, Retail Companies, Manufacturers, drug companies, etc. all have software and they all need developers. Also right now the economy is getting bad. And typically when the economy is bad companies cut down on spending (like buying software from a software company). So jobs may be harder to find. In 2002 when I graduated most of the software companies at the job fair were not hiring software people...

  3. Most university programs teach theory not practice. The best example I can think of is networking class. It taught about transmission mediums, network layers, etc. but ultimately it did not show me how to set up my home network. With a lot of classes unless you taught yourself the practical application on your own, you just know the theory. The thinking is the theory makes it easier to learn the practical aspects. But you will find employers want the practical. They want someone who can do ASP.NET. I learned (well reviewed) C++ at college, I never bothered to learn ASP.NET because I couldn't be bothered to pay for MS stuff. ASP.NET is just VB.NET or C# which is similar to Java which is similar to C++ usually with a bunch additional API's which are easy to learn (but will still take some time). Employers just want someone who can do ASP.NET. The same applies to Java. Maybe you know Java and have used it in various projects (I took a Java class in school which covered the basics of the language, some libraries, but again focused on the Java Virtual Machine and the theory) but do you know Spring/Hibernate. Have you used JDBC to hook it up to a database? Basically employers want the practical stuff, not the theory.

  4. Also employers like to pigeon hole people into a job. If at your last job you were doing Java development with the Spring framework. You survived college. You know how to program. You know a lot of higher math and have strong problem solving skills. Even if you don't know technology X using your background in the theory and other similar technologies you can probably learn it pretty easy. Employers would prefer not to take the chance and just to hire someone who used that exact technology in a previous job. You have an advantage here because you did not have a previous job. But by the same token it is a disadvantage because you have no job experience. Many will see it as taking a risk on you. Also in college you won't know many of the technologies they want. So it may take some convincing to get someone doing ASP.NET or JSP to hire you if you have no experience in it when they can just hire someone from a different job to do it.

I would also add your choice of a first job is important. If you work with a narrow technology there is a good chance you will be pigeon holed. If you get to work with a variety of technologies and learn a lot it leaves later options much more open.

And don't be discouraged. You can learn most of the technologies. The problem is you can't learn all of the technologies or you'll drive yourself crazy. AJAX (which framework), ASP.NET, JSP, Servlets, Ruby on Rails, Django, WxWidgets, GTK, QT, Boost, etc... Over a long period of time you could learn the technologies. But in the time frame that you want to get a job you can't and if you try you'll drive yourself crazy. Your best bet is to find a small company and grow with them.

PHP and mySQL may be worth learning and creating a simple website to read your resume from a mysql database. There are a lot of jobs with PHP and MySQL these days. I don't know PHP myself but there are many jobs posted for it everywhere.

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That oftentimes, you'll have to throw programming practices, good code, skip planning, in order to meet some other requirements.

And after that realizing, it's your responsibility to balance it all.

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That years of experience, qualifications and job title are less of an indicator of how good a developer is when compared to real passion for the job and an open mind to alternative views.

So @nobody, being a trusted user of Stack Overflow before you have even graduated can only be good for your career ;)

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Timeframes. In the real world timeframes are very important. Remember that you will not have the amount of time that you would like to do things like employ best practices and implement feature sets that you know will benefit the client. Choosing premade solutions is a necessary evil; and an important lesson to lean. Also learn how to gauge the amount of time you need to complete a project or a certain feature.

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The surprising thing is that many companies are earning lot of money by having only 15%-20% good developers, rest of them are quite bad. It is the team thing you see.

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Most everything that you are taught in college is seriously outdated. Be prepared to hit the ground running.

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Well, my first company surprised me with all things I didn't know. Second it surprised me with the absolute lack of professionalism and third one with huge money wasting :)

The way you will be surprised depends purely on the company for which you will be working.

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The fact that, when building business applications, you will rarely use all the information learnt on college (such as compilers/algorithms/data structures) as most of the basic computing problems have aldready been solved for you (in the format of libraries and / or frameworks).

However it does give an edge when you have to solve a problem and you optimize the solution by using one of the models taught (using a red an black tree to order some data in session, for instance).

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At risk of stating the obvious: in the "real world" you generally get paid for the work you do. (Sorry, I've just been reading Piled Higher and Deeper.)

In school, 80% gets you a 'B'. In the real world, 80% gets you fired.

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On the other hand, in the real world, you get the chance to fix your mistakes to make that 80% better. There's no such chance at school, it's all or nothing. – Matthew Scharley Oct 18 '08 at 3:11
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The fact that most programs don't actually do anything. The vast majority of your work will be "Input data from the keyboard, write it to the database; Read data from the database, write it to the screen".

One might expect that there would be some processing or manipulation along the way, but actually there's very little of that.

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The value of experience. As you grow as a developer, encountering a bug becomes less and less of an issue. You begin to recognize the same mistakes people make over and over, and can quickly identify the cause of a problem as you see it happening.

Starting out, I thought I knew as much as someone with more experience, but what they had that I didn't was that keen ability to identify likely causes that would take a beginner a lot more time to figure out. It may sound like a simple difference, but the only way you can learn this is through experience. That experience can save days of work some times.

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As someone who is 2 years out of college, I have a fairly recent take here as opposed to the more grizzled veterans.

1) Unless you went to a pretty exceptional college or studied independently quite a bit, you will know next to nothing about what it takes to actually get software written. Academia teaches you the bare essentials on what you need to survive in the computer programming industry, it's up to you to expand on it.

2) Prepare to work horrible jobs unless you commit to continue expanding your knowledge. Complacency will land you in a 20 year career of Access databases and classic ASP site maintenance pretty damn fast.

3) Be prepared to not always take the best path. Academic programming teaching does have a tinge of idealism to it. They'll show you some fairly Point A to Point B solutions and everything in between, but a HUGE part of software maintenance, especially in fast paced environments, is working with what you've got. Your eCommerce framework doesn't support web services? Oh well! Guess you'll just have to figure that stuff out, etc, etc.

4) PHP is horrible.

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Academia is an echo chamber. What echoes back and forth is what is currently popular on the conference circuit, and it forms a positive feedback loop that always seeks the latest bandwagon.

In the real world, there's a whole new thing, concrete reality, that dominates.

You can see this in the way academics vs. practitioners discuss things. Academics get hot under the collar and form competing schools of thought because what they're really after is wooing editors to publish their papers so they can get prestige and hopefully some job security. Practitioners, on the other hand, tend to be more calm and pragmatic (and no less intelligent) and while they may disagree, the ultimate arbiter is whether they can get problems solved.

Another difference I noticed is that in academia, "smartness" is valued. How often do you hear "Prof. X is really smart", and that forms sort of a currency. In the real world, it is more important to be pragmatic and a team-player.

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