If you could go back and give yourself one piece of advice at the start of your programming life/career to help you on your way what would it be ?
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Never work for a company that doesn't score at least a ten on the [Joel Test] (http://www.joelonsoftware.com/articles/fog0000000043.html "Joel Test") |
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When you realize that your job sucks, LEAVE. You're not under any obligation to stick with a failing company/project/team/... There are better things out there. |
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Contribute to open source. From there, you'll learn the basic software development stuff that most schools don't teach like version control and issue tracker. Surprisingly (though I'm not surprised anymore), a lot of programmers are still in the dark about these things. |
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People are very superficial, get a smart suit (and keep it smart), iron your shirts well etc., and you will get on faster. |
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Screw this job! I never wanted to be a coder... I always wanted to be... ...A LUMBER JACK! Leaping from tree to tree, as they float down the mighty rivers of British Columbia. The Giant Redwood. The Larch. The Fir! The mighty Scots Pine! The lofty flowering Cherry! The plucky little Apsen! The limping Roo tree of Nigeria. The towering Wattle of Aldershot! The Maidenhead Weeping Water Plant! The naughty Leicestershire Flashing Oak! The flatulent Elm of West Ruislip! The Quercus Maximus Bamber Gascoigni! The Epigillus! The Barter Hughius Greenus! With my best buddy by my side, we'd sing! Sing! Sing! |
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Sometimes you just have to do whatever it is you think really needs to be done. It is easier to beg forgiveness than to ask permission. At the same time, make sure you know how to do what needs to be done :) |
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"Debugging is twice as hard as writing the code in the first place. Therefore, if you write code as cleverly as possible, you are, by definition, not smart enough to debug it." - attributed to Brian Kernighan. ... the blood, the sweat, the tears that I have caused myself! |
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Set aside some time every day for learning. It doesn't need to be much, 30 minutes first thing in the morning before you start reading your emails will do. |
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Learn the difference between the things you can control and the things you can't control. That way, you can spend your time and energy (both very finite) worrying about and working to improve the things you can control (skills/knowledge, attitude, work ethic, assertiveness, adaptability, punctuality, etc.) instead of the things you can't control (your boss, others' opinions of you, etc). |
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Read about your practice... Keep up with one job related blog/site... Always keep learning... |
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Your work is about interactions with others. With people, with problems, with systems, with office politics, with the customers, with your boss. You never work in a vacuum, even if you are the only programmer on the project. Learn to play well with others and you will be years ahead. Good ways to do this include, but are not limited to:
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I'd advise myself to not be so frightened that I'm dumb, this stuff is really hard. I'd advise myself that nobody knows even anything close to everything so the hallmark of a good programmer is to always question everything and to remain curious. I'd also point myself at Jeff's article on Strong Opinions Weakly Held (well it didn't exist back then, I'd take a copy with me ;-), because that article has completely changed my attitude to life as well as code. |
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Write more code. The only way to get better at writing code is by doing it. |
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Any code you write, either
So, make it readable, consistent, commented, and documented. I've spent so much time and effort trying to figure out what code does that I'VE WRITTEN that it's ridiculous. |
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Maintain an interest other than programming and IT. Make sure you stay (or get) "socially healthy". Also, find yourself a mentor or three to learn from - it's far easier and more interesting to learn from people than from books. |
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If you don't know how to do something, give the problem a good name. |
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Try to always work with people that are smarter than you. Life is too short to be surrounded by morons and trying to fix problems that everybody are aware of but nobody really cares to fix. |
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Don't sleep in till midday every day when at uni studying comp sci, it won't end well for you that way. |
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Never, ever stop learning new things. If you don't have the opportunity to try out new stuff at work, buy books and learn on your own. Learn by both breadth and depth - learn a tiny bit about everything, and pick two or three things to really focus on and learn inside and out. |
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Step through every new line of code in a debugger. It is the easiest way to find new bugs. |
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Learn another programming language. The perspective you gain is worth it, even if you never use the language professionally. |
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Your wheel is not better! Suck it up. |
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Read Code Complete and understand that the most important thing is that people can understand your program easily ( even you, 6 months later ) |
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Actually finish some of your pet projects. |
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Don't do prototypes! |
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Write or help write something other people use and you have to support - you'll soon see where your weaknesses are when other people get their grubby mitts on your hard work! |
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Keep up with the latest technologies, but don't overspecialize. Everything becomes obsolete or loses popularity eventually. |
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Don't get your life advice on the internet. |
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Test First - It forces you to define the minimal set of criteria you need to solve your problem. You'll build better interfaces (api), and you'll write less code by developing "just enough" code to pass the test. The tests also serve as "documentation" to other developers on how the system is supposed to behave and allows them to add behavior without fear they are breaking functionality. I was surprised how effective this technique is and how it increased my productivity. |
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