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There is a colleague who seriously knows his stuff, he is one of the brightest I've ever worked with, but he:

  • works in his own little area of his home directory rather than in the common CVS repository
  • doesn't document his code
  • doesn't comment his code, e.g. 3,500 SLOC of C with no comments and no blank lines to break things up
  • often overcomplicates things, e.g. uses three shell scripts that call one another to do the work that one simple shell script could do.

Maybe this possibly is one of those people who thinks "if I'm the only person who knows this, they can't get rid of me"?

Any suggestions on what to do?

BTW Management knows about the situation and are trying to change things.

cheers,

Rob

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44 Answers

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vote up 4 vote down

Is the guy really a rock star? Seriously? Think about it for a second. Is he smart, but doesn't get things done, or is he both smart and able to get things done?

Think about it really hard.

If he really is a rock star, then maybe you shouldn't mess with him. He's producing incredibly awesome things using his own process. Just because there's a different way of doing things that works best for you, doesn't mean that's going to enable him to produce his best work. Instead of trying to get him to bend to your process, which very well could kill all of his awesomeness, you should try and find a way to accommodate the way he works.

If he really is as good as you say, you shouldn't mind doing that. If it isn't worth the effort to do that, then he really isn't that good. In that case, you don't have a rock star, you just have a mediocre programmer that doesn't like to play be the rules. Those guys, you should just get rid of. A temperamental rock star is usually worth the pain, though, because of the quality of what he or she can produce. Those people, you should go to great lengths to keep.

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vote up 6 vote down

If he really is that bright and you cannot change his ways, nor do you want to lose him but you still want your code to be documented and commented then my suggestion would be to let a less experienced developer do the documenting and commenting for him. Personally if I were a star developer I would feel prettiy foolish if someone else was made to comment my code and I would start to do it myself eventually. In the meantime while that does not happen the less experienced developer may learn a thing or two.

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vote up 2 vote down

You could also add automated quality checks that would prevent him checking-in his code until it was sufficiently documented.

That is if you can persuade him to check-in in the first place! (Which is ESSENTIAL, imo)

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vote up 2 vote down

Don't let the code be released until it has passed code review and only allow it to pass if there are enough comments and/or documentation for the code which he has written for the current feature/project.

Edit Bring it up in his appraisal. Documentation / commenting code can be given to him for his "Areas of improvement".

:-)

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vote up 7 vote down

There's more to being a star developer than just being an excellent programmer. If he doesn't have team skills and is purposefully ignoring team standards it needs to be brought up to him. If he refuses to adhere to them after talking with management, perhaps he's not the right fit for your company.

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vote up 16 vote down

Failing to document is a (very bad) way to ensure job security.

You can do several things to counter this:

  • add documentation as a requirement for the personal performance reviews.
  • don't accept software that isn't documented.
  • have a word with the developer and find out why he doesn't document.
  • Buy a cool documentation tool.
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vote up 2 vote down

+1 to ocdecio - if he is a star developer, then his code should be based on such a high-quality design that it documents itself.

Having said that, the frustration could be that although he's excellent in technically-demanding areas which are interesting to him, he doesn't muck-in with the delivery of features - only you will know whether this is a problem for your organisation.

Having a "guru" available can be an absolute life-saver - or at least it used to be, or has StackOverflow made that role redundant?

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vote up 2 vote down

Can the team be successful with out him? If so push the issue and refuse to accept any code that isn’t properly documented or doesn’t meet other standards. Hopefully this will get the point across but it might just make him angry and cause him to quit. If the team can’t be successful with out him then you’re out of luck until you can train a replacement up to his skill level which may not be worth the time and effort.

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vote up 2 vote down

Code documentation is over-rated. CVS training is easy.

A good class should reveal its purpose through its methods and properties.

Documenting the model outside of the application is also easier to flow and comprehend.

I would bring it to his attention, if you can't get it resolved looks like you will be losing a star developer.

Edit: Oops - used CSV instead of CVS, to many imports and i use svn heh.

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vote up 10 vote down

Talk to him?

If he really is a "star developer" he'll take note of what you say.

It may not change him overnight but it might be that he is just completely unaware that other people dont get it quite like he does.


Edit:

It's probably a bit late to change now, but more information is needed in working out a solution. It's impossible for anyone here to actually suggest letting the guy go based on these points alone. If you've been telling the guy every day for the last year that he needs to change or he's out of here, then you can let him go. However, I see no evidence of that.

A brilliant developer can be taught to use source control, comment and document. If you spend the effort here then you truly will have a star developer.

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vote up 2 vote down

It's very unlikely that management will get rid of him if he is really bright.

The whole project may be closed, of course, but there will be no use in CVS and documentation then, anyway.

No management will fire a good programmer only to hire a bad one.

Tell him that it will help him to get rid of management whenever he wants to.

What is he wants to change job? He can tell management: "OK, people, everything's just like you asked me: checked in, documented and under you control. I'm done with my part, I pack and leave".

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vote up 3 vote down

Trying to change things? What do you prefer, a poorly documented working piece of software or a well documented junk? Some people is capable of writing software that requires little to no comments, that is not a reliable indicator of quality.

I'm afraid you're going to lose a good developer.

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vote up 25 vote down

That sounds like a tough situation.

Personally, I would let him go. He may be a star developer, but he isn't a team player. And you need to have a cohesive team that can work together if you want to make a good product.

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vote up 43 vote down

The CVS part is easy - an "accidental" hard drive failure will teach him a lesson for a life (make sure you have a backup though so you won't actually lose code)

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1  
@DrJokepu: My point exactly, this question states three issues with the developer in question with absolutly no indication of how any of them have been addressed already. If they haven't then its there's no debate. He could easily turn around and say. "Sorry, I'll do from now on." – Robin Day Feb 10 at 15:37
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It happend. Nothing changed. Star developer blamed IT staff. It did not teach him anything – LicenseQ Feb 10 at 16:44
1  
He's not a star developer, then. He's just a smart ego maniac. – Richard Levasseur Feb 10 at 18:05
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