I've been doing programming for a few years and I am passionate about algorithms. I read books on it and develop them for programming contests. But on the interviews they ask me more and more non-algorithmic questions, the ones that you have to read a thick book on .NET and remember most of it by memory like the Bible. Does it mean that the society values hard to remember knowledge more and therefore I should force myself to read those books, or is there a way to find a job that concentrates more on algorithm development?
|
3 | added 1 characters in body | ||
|
|
||||
|
2 | edited body | ||
|
I've been doing programming for a few years and I am passionate about algorithms. I read books on it and develop them for programming contests. But on the interviews they ask me more and more non-algorithmic questions, the ones that you have to read a think thick book on .NET and remember most of it by memory like Bible. Does it mean that the society values hard to remember knowledge more and therefore I should force myself to read those books or is there a way to find a job that concentrates more on algorithm development? |
||||
|
1 |
|
||
What career can I hope for if I like algorithms?I've been doing programming for a few years and I am passionate about algorithms. I read books on it and develop them for programming contests. But on the interviews they ask me more and more non-algorithmic questions, the ones that you have to read a think book on .NET and remember most of it by memory like Bible. Does it mean that the society values hard to remember knowledge more and therefore I should force myself to read those books or is there a way to find a job that concentrates more on algorithm development?
|
||||
