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I think it is an important question for our profession to answer. Here's my attempt at a definition: Someone who applies principles from Computer Science and best-practices from the software industry to create valuable software-intensive systems.

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stackoverflow.com/questions/1537/… stackoverflow.com/questions/209551/… stackoverflow.com/questions/141502/… – Patrick McElhaney Dec 5 '08 at 14:12
stackoverflow.com/questions/27516/… – Patrick McElhaney Dec 5 '08 at 14:13
I agree with the closing of this since it's already been answered elsewhere. – Omar Kooheji Dec 5 '08 at 14:15

closed as exact duplicate by Robert S. Dec 5 '08 at 15:20

2 Answers

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From wikipedia

A software engineer is a person who applies the principles of software engineering to the design, development, testing, and evaluation of the software and systems that make computers work. These people work long hours and may be asked to work overtime. Positives of this career are the good money, option of working at home, and it's perfect for people that want to work with computers and have a predilection for them.

Which is pretty much what you said...

IMHO:

Being and "Engineer" implies that it's a trained job, and a level of acountability, which the terms Programmer, Hacker, Code monkey etc. don't carry.

I seem to remember somewhere taking issue with us calling ourselves Engineers (I think it was Canada).

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I think people forget the engineering side of Computers. I'd do a definition that stresses the "building" side of being a Software Engineer.

A Software Engineer is someone who applies engineering principles (design, planning, mathematics, etc.) to the activity of building software.

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