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Learning to deal with people who lack skill in architecture and meta concepts but who illogically think that some other expertise makes them correct in this area.

Now in genearlgeneral, I have an easy time getting along with people, and this is a rarity, but when it hits, boy can it be a doozy. Often what you are fighting against here is someone's ego, or rather you are trying to debate a point of logic, but finding the ego shield is protecting the logical vulnerability. It can be hard to convince someone that you are in fact correct and that they have a made a mistake when they have already decided their superiority because they know oh so much more than you about: A)Graphical engines B)SCRUM C) The C++ spec D) Making flow charts.

These hardest cases are where the person DOES know a great deal about some area, but has some inability to understand a logical argument... so if you question the logic of "having skill X automatically translates to skill Y" ends up getting interpreted as "ZOMG you have questioned my skills, how dare you."

This is the single hardest skill I think a programmer willever will ever had to learn. It is especially hard for a programmer because we tend to be poor at diplomacy, especially in the face of illogical arguments. Nothing in school will train you for this, and it really only tends to happen once you hit the mid and senior levels.

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Learning to deal with people who lack skill in architecture and meta concepts but who illogically think that some other expertise makes them correct in this area.

Now in genearl, I have an easy time getting along with people, and this is a rarity, but when it hits, boy can it be a doozy. Often what you are fighting against here is someone's ego, or rather you are trying to debate a point of logic, but finding the ego shield is protecting the logical vulnerability. It can be hard to convince someone that you are in fact correct and that they have a made a mistake when they have already decided their superiority because they know oh so much more than you about: A)Graphical engines B)SCRUM C) The C++ spec D) Making flow charts.

These hardest cases are where the person DOES know a great deal about some area, but has some inability to understand a logical argument... so if you question the logic of "having skill X automatically translates to skill Y" ends up getting interpreted as "ZOMG you have questioned my skills, how dare you."

This is the single hardest skill I think a programmer willever had to learn. It is especially hard for a programmer because we tend to be poor at diplomacy, especially in the face of illogical arguments. Nothing in school will train you for this, and it really only tends to happen once you hit the mid and senior levels.

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