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GeneralRe: Should I learn ATL/COM now? [modified] Pin
CPP_Student31-Jul-06 7:52
CPP_Student31-Jul-06 7:52 
AnswerRe: Should I learn ATL/COM now? Pin
Zac Howland31-Jul-06 8:32
Zac Howland31-Jul-06 8:32 
GeneralRe: Should I learn ATL/COM now? Pin
Kevin McFarlane31-Jul-06 9:11
Kevin McFarlane31-Jul-06 9:11 
GeneralRe: Should I learn ATL/COM now? Pin
Zac Howland31-Jul-06 9:24
Zac Howland31-Jul-06 9:24 
GeneralRe: What I am trying to do [modified] Pin
CPP_Student31-Jul-06 10:33
CPP_Student31-Jul-06 10:33 
GeneralRe: What I am trying to do Pin
Zac Howland31-Jul-06 10:57
Zac Howland31-Jul-06 10:57 
GeneralRe: Should I learn ATL/COM now? Pin
Kevin McFarlane31-Jul-06 10:52
Kevin McFarlane31-Jul-06 10:52 
GeneralRe: Should I learn ATL/COM now? Pin
Zac Howland31-Jul-06 11:11
Zac Howland31-Jul-06 11:11 
Kevin McFarlane wrote:
Possibly the reality is different when you get into the actual job but in the actual job ads this isn't the case.


Keep in mind (at least in the US), Job ads tend to be written by HR people who have no knowledge of problem solving (in a computer-related sense) nor programming. I've seen ads that as for "MSCE and MCP certification required" (anyone who knows much about the certifications realizes that MCSE IS a MCP certification). I tend to look at the ads from more of a high-level view; that is, I see that they are looking for someone ... and that they want a programmer. The ads that specifically mention .Net, I tend to skip over because at least over here, every single one I have answered has been looking for an ASP.Net "programmer".

Kevin McFarlane wrote:
I know, but this guy has had an MS background and suggests by his interest in COM that he plans to remain in this domain in the near future. If so, it would seem advisable to pick up .NET whether he likes it or not.


Granted, though, I wouldn't limit myself to such a small domain (being in his position). I've found (as both a job seeker and as a hiring manager) that the most successful interviewees tend to be those that focused on the fundamentals during their off-time between jobs. Then again, I've been lucky enough to run into several companies that actually do proper interviews (that is, ask you how you could go about solving a problem instead of asking you to describe the code you would write to do a specific task ... if you can google the answer, the question shouldn't be in your interview).

Kevin McFarlane wrote:
most of them do just concentrate on silly "what is" questions


My recent experience with this was just the opposite (at least with the companies that I would have wanted to work for). I did get a few "how do you do X in this language with this library" questions in a couple interviews. And generally, it was those companies that I came away from the interview saying, "I don't care if I get a callback ... I don't want to work for them." (not for that reason, mind you, but it tends to go along with the culture of advocating drone programmers that produce massive amounts of code quickly instead of taking the time to think about the problem and what problems may come along with it down the road before writing the code).

Kevin McFarlane wrote:
"If you have 2 years' experience in C++ we will X-train you into Delphi. "

Today, such ads. are few and far between. And where you do see them they're often aimed at recent graduates rather than more senior developers.


Perhaps they would place ads like that in the UK, but in the US, I've never seen one like that. In my experience, if you can show that you understand basic programming fundamentals and the ability to problem-solve, you won't have any trouble going through any interviews.



If you decide to become a software engineer, you are signing up to have a 1/2" piece of silicon tell you exactly how stupid you really are for 8 hours a day, 5 days a week

Zac

GeneralRe: Should I learn ATL/COM now? Pin
Kevin McFarlane1-Aug-06 0:42
Kevin McFarlane1-Aug-06 0:42 
GeneralTo Zac Pin
CPP_Student31-Jul-06 12:36
CPP_Student31-Jul-06 12:36 
Questionvector -- call methods from inheritance classes [modified] Pin
RealWood30-Jul-06 4:56
RealWood30-Jul-06 4:56 
GeneralRe: vector -- call methods from inheritance classes Pin
Justin Tay30-Jul-06 5:46
Justin Tay30-Jul-06 5:46 
GeneralRe: vector -- call methods from inheritance classes Pin
RealWood30-Jul-06 8:09
RealWood30-Jul-06 8:09 
GeneralRe: vector -- call methods from inheritance classes [modified] Pin
Justin Tay30-Jul-06 10:37
Justin Tay30-Jul-06 10:37 
GeneralRe: vector -- call methods from inheritance classes [modified] Pin
Zac Howland31-Jul-06 9:03
Zac Howland31-Jul-06 9:03 
GeneralRe: vector -- call methods from inheritance classes Pin
RealWood31-Jul-06 11:32
RealWood31-Jul-06 11:32 
QuestionHow to CComBSTR convert to char *? Pin
alan top29-Jul-06 2:49
alan top29-Jul-06 2:49 
AnswerRe: How to CComBSTR convert to char *? Pin
Monty229-Jul-06 21:36
Monty229-Jul-06 21:36 
GeneralRe: How to CComBSTR convert to char *? Pin
Jörgen Sigvardsson30-Jul-06 9:21
Jörgen Sigvardsson30-Jul-06 9:21 
AnswerRe: How to CComBSTR convert to char *? Pin
Michael Dunn29-Jul-06 23:24
sitebuilderMichael Dunn29-Jul-06 23:24 
AnswerRe: How to CComBSTR convert to char *? Pin
Zac Howland31-Jul-06 8:37
Zac Howland31-Jul-06 8:37 
GeneralRe: How to CComBSTR convert to char *? Pin
Jörgen Sigvardsson1-Aug-06 12:27
Jörgen Sigvardsson1-Aug-06 12:27 
QuestionScrolling Woes. Pin
HakunaMatada28-Jul-06 23:21
HakunaMatada28-Jul-06 23:21 
AnswerRe: Scrolling Woes. Pin
Monty229-Jul-06 21:38
Monty229-Jul-06 21:38 
GeneralRe: Scrolling Woes. Pin
HakunaMatada30-Jul-06 18:40
HakunaMatada30-Jul-06 18:40 

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