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Exactly. However, some developers just want to go fishing or golfing on their day off. Some will pick a book and learn a new language, new ideas, new paradigm... These are what I've observed that make the different between those that just work in tech and those that lead the tech.
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I think you're right.
I also think most of the commenters on this thread completely misunderstood what you asked. For those who did, note that he didn't state that the people programming outside of work weren't also programming at work. His question was more about whether people who *also* program at home, for fun, are more in tune with programming than people who switch off as soon as they leave the office, and only program for work.
But yes, all the best of us engage in recreational programming: programming is more than a job for us: it's a way of thinking.
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You hit the nail square. Couldn't said it better myself. I have colleagues with some very sharp and some are okay. But the okay folks are kept going back to the other sharp for answers on the team. The only difference I've notice is that those sharp group spend more time off hours to understand the technology where the okay group seems to not care so much about technology and be there just for the pay check.
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I've seen much the same thing... I think for the sharp ones, they job is because they like to do it, and it's easy to have that job, whereas the other ones learned it in order to do the job, which is a whole different viewpoint.
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Yes. Hence I framed the question "Code for fun" as a hobby and not so much as just code outside of work. When one is doing a hobby no about of time or money matters. The passion for hobby is (for me anyway) addicting and as the old saying "practice makes for perfection" -- not sure that is true for coding, but did learn a lot from it.
modified 10-Oct-14 12:11pm.
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You are conflating skill and interest.. those two things may meet.. but frequently do NOT.
In my life, I've met few truly great programmers.. and to date not one of the greats has been a coder outside of work. I DO see folks falling for the 'I code outside of work' machismo like its something to be proud of.. but to me its never translated to someone how is truly great at getting things done with a minimum of complexity, partitions modules based on logical precepts, and keeps things easy to maintain.
Those engineering type skills are severely lacking in most programmers.. which is why I keep seeing so many utter messes that must be dealt with.
The panacea of programming that most seek is contained in one word: rigor. Rigor is not based on hours/day.. its based on how you think and apply the lessons of engineering. Working tired actually DECREASES rigor..
Just my 2cents.
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A very valid point. I have long advocated the use of robust engineering practices to build software (check out some of my tips / articles on here). Software is an engineering discipline, and rigour is at the heart of that discipline.
I have worked with many software developers, some good, some not so good. Some of the great ones however didn't have IT as their background. A couple had degrees in philosophy. This meant they could look at problems with a completely different perspective than your died-in-the-wool developer. They also weren't constrained by tradition or "what everyone else is doing".
Another great developer I have worked with left school and went straight into IT and eventually into software development. His depth of knowledge was unsurpassed.
A great developer therefore isn't necessarily someone who has an IT background or even IT qualifications. It's more about their attitude and how they approach solving a problem, and how well they understand the various tools, technologies and methodologies to solve those problems.
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I'm also a musician.
Lifelong interest in the arts..
Interest in philosphy.
I tend to agree!
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I guess what I really meant to say was the difference between developers with passion versus developers as to hold a job. But I do agree with what you said, rigor with a passion.
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I tend to agree.
Passion for programming is definitely not required. I wouldn't call myself passionate about programming.. Its what I do to make money..
But I AM passionate about QUALITY. And I bring that passion to whatever I do.. programming included.
Its why I always suspicious of folks who say they are passionate about programming. I can understand wanting to learn more.. and do things better.. but to me the goal is HOW I deliver things to others, and how many bugs I do/don't create in the process. And how easy it is to use what I deliver.
I saw a write up on another site talking about how Object Oriented Programming is a huge fail and needs to be gotten rid of.. the rant goes on for pages.. and its clear the poor fool completely misses the point. Bad software can be written in any language.. because its the level of rigor we do/don't bring to the table that defines our end product. Some languages make it easier to express that rigor in real terms.. but at the end of the day if I get a job at a company 99% of the time the choice of language is not mine.. which means the only thing I have control over is the processes and thinking required to make programs. That rigor part. That is the end I've been working to my entire life.. and why after 30+ years I create very few bugs and provide value to the organization I'm in..
What I'm always surprised by is how difficult it is to sell rigor to the folks I work with.. I'll get lip service.. but rarely real buy in for it.. and in my experience its a true differentiator...and also the reason so much crap is committed to code (i.e. a LACK of rigor).
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Funny, I read that article, but only got pass about 3 paragraphs and I knew the author doesn't know what OOP really is, then I quit reading it. As for buying into rigor, we have a saying in the federal government research sector "You need to add a Dr. in front of your name before people will take you serious." I ran into that every day.
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Yeah.. I got further than you, about 3 pages.. before I decided he was ranting about something I don't consider a problem. I personally find OO helps me protect one portion of a larger system from another.. and partition a system reasonably for maintenance.. but I ALSO know what to avoid in OO so that complexity is reduced. To me.. O-O doesn't get in the way.. and is much better than structured programming (which I used in the 80s and early 90s).
The issue that author is worried about just isn't an issue. The REAL issue is there is no magic bullet to replace discipline and rigor in programming.. and management doesn't know how to create high quality because most management doesn't have the engineering experience to even know the real goals to create that (how many managers have I met that only were engineers for 5 years.. when in my experience you don't even achieve first level master until 7-10 years?).
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I wanna code for fun, but I am too busy enjoying other things in life.
Code Project helps me keep in-tune with my skills and gives me the broader knowledge, so I can.
"I am rarely happier than when spending entire day programming my computer to perform automatically a task that it would otherwise take me a good ten seconds to do by hand."
- Douglas Adams
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Your observation is correct. (But, of course, there are exceptions to every rule.)
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Unlike others on this thread, I agree with you.
My hobby projects have always helped me on the job. They let me experiment before they are in mission critical mode. They let me take the time to learn something, rather than just do what is necessary because the deadline looms.
Work will pigeonhole you, bad enough they think you can only do what they have assigned you. It won't necessarily expand your skills for your next job, unless you just want to do only what you have done before, forever.
My hobby projects tend to come in handy when management is gearing up to hire consultants or purchase outside modules because they think they don't have onhand staff that knows how to do something.
I've saved the companies I've worked for $10's of thousands of dollars on each project for each work project that I was able to demonstrate how the knowledge I learned on a hobby project had direct bearing and was applicable to the problem at hand.
Psychosis at 10
Film at 11
Those who do not remember the past, are doomed to repeat it.
Those who do not remember the past, cannot build upon it.
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Well, almost all my coding is as a hobbyist, though I do have some training and I do occasionally write small commercial apps (as favors generally). Indeed, for a long time my hobby was my job and that included coding (amongst other things). My knowledge is certainly not as deep as many professionals, though being a mathematician and scientist gives me strengths in certain specialist applications. Also, My skills are not always highly polished, as I program sporadically (when I have the time)and flitter between technologies. (If I went for an interview I would have to brush up on the specific skills required and wipe off the rust). I do consider my knowledge fairly broad, however, as I am not constrained. I enjoy playing around with C#, Java and C++ mostly and computer graphics and also PHP and Java, so I can hold my own on detailed comparisons between the workings of Java and C# for example. I have also been around for a bit so I remember when assembly language was an essential tool (lol). I remember the rise of OOP and remember coding database applications without it, so I can give a good discourse on the relative pros and cons of each. So, breadth maybe, but not the specific skills and experience most commercial roles require.
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I used do lots of hobby code, lately, due to time, I off-shore all my hobby coding to India. My code quality since has gone downhill.
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Those of a certain vintage may recall the space trading game Elite with fondness. I learned the other day it is to be reincarnated (sorry if I'm slow on this news), and oh my it looks good.
http://www.elitedangerous.com/[^]
It's being funded by Kickstarter and you can join the beta for a modest £50, $75, probably released at the end of the year. Have a look at youtube for some gameplay.
The inner nerd is calling. I might just have to divorce the family, pack the job in, get a bedsit somewhere remote but with decent broadband and play this until I die.
Regards,
Rob Philpott.
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I am waiting to upgrade a machine just for this.
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A honking great 5 real points and 995 wish points from me.
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Looks very cool.
There's no way in hell I'd pay $75 for a game, especially a beta.
If it's not broken, fix it until it is
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Oh Wow!, might remove the first Elite Sequel ('Frontier' ??) from my memory, so much a missed chance. I remember the 1980's, Elite was basically the reason the BBC Micro & Acorn Electron sold to the home market....
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If you really want to go for it, play it wearing an Oculus Rift./[^].
There's an interesting Yotube video[^] on combining the two - although the verdict is that Oculus Rift is not necessary however does add something to the game.
“That which can be asserted without evidence, can be dismissed without evidence.”
― Christopher Hitchens
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