I agree. I don’t doubt she’s a programmer, at least by schooling but clearly it’s not how she makes her living. To be actually job market proficient in that many languages is not realistic. I took a class in college and learned MIPS but I don’t list it on my resume. I “know” at least 2x as many languages that I have listed on my resume but I am not proficient enough with them to perform real world work with them. Look at any job posting they want 2-5 years experience in any given language to even be considered. It seems she would be a qualified iOS engineer but the rest I’m not so sure.
Are you like, not a very good programmer? I know at least as many languages as listed here, have worked in many of them, and what I find in modern times is that a few weeks in a language is more than enough to do real work. Shit, like half of programming languages are just based on whether the creator of said language likes semi-colons or not.
Yeah, if you think being able to program in python, 3 variants of C, and the assembly language they teach you in school is unrealistic, you’re probably just a shit programmer.
… No one actually cares if you have 2-5 years of experience in the specific language. I’ve actually never had prior experience in the primary language of any role I’ve been hired for. At most I just tell the interviewer that my experience with the language is 1 week of reading an online intro guide, and then show my ability to just code in the interview. If I can’t make something compilable yet, most interviews are happy with pseudocode. But it really should only take a few days of prep to be able to make something compilable in any language.
A programmer needs enough base knowledge on what they’re doing, but that’s mostly universal. Languages you can just pick up based on what seems best suited for the momentary need.
I agree. I don’t doubt she’s a programmer, at least by schooling but clearly it’s not how she makes her living. To be actually job market proficient in that many languages is not realistic. I took a class in college and learned MIPS but I don’t list it on my resume. I “know” at least 2x as many languages that I have listed on my resume but I am not proficient enough with them to perform real world work with them. Look at any job posting they want 2-5 years experience in any given language to even be considered. It seems she would be a qualified iOS engineer but the rest I’m not so sure.
Are you like, not a very good programmer? I know at least as many languages as listed here, have worked in many of them, and what I find in modern times is that a few weeks in a language is more than enough to do real work. Shit, like half of programming languages are just based on whether the creator of said language likes semi-colons or not.
Yeah, if you think being able to program in python, 3 variants of C, and the assembly language they teach you in school is unrealistic, you’re probably just a shit programmer.
… No one actually cares if you have 2-5 years of experience in the specific language. I’ve actually never had prior experience in the primary language of any role I’ve been hired for. At most I just tell the interviewer that my experience with the language is 1 week of reading an online intro guide, and then show my ability to just code in the interview. If I can’t make something compilable yet, most interviews are happy with pseudocode. But it really should only take a few days of prep to be able to make something compilable in any language.
A programmer needs enough base knowledge on what they’re doing, but that’s mostly universal. Languages you can just pick up based on what seems best suited for the momentary need.
if I ever entered the job market I’d list things like Pascal, Logo, Basic, 6502 assembly … so shes doing better than me at least.