Popular Post socrates Posted February 4 Popular Post Report Share Posted February 4 π² LeetCode warrior: Excels at algorithmic problems but lacks real-world software engineering skills. Over-engineers solutions, often ignoring maintainability and business needs. Struggles with system design, debugging, and writing clean, production-ready code. β¨ Hackathon enthusiast: Great at building quick prototypes but rarely finishes a polished product. Optimizes for speed and flashy demos rather than robustness and maintainability. π Trend chaser: Constantly talking about the latest JavaScript frameworks. Pushes new technologies onto the team without fully understanding them. Often leaves behind a trail of half-adopted, abandoned tools. π€ FP nerd: Insists on using functional programming in every scenario, even when impractical. Writes overly abstract code that confuses teammates unfamiliar with FP paradigms. Prefers theoretical purity over pragmatic solutions. πͺ Brogrammer: More focused on culture fit and team βvibesβ than actual engineering skills. Dismisses best practices in favor of quick-and-dirty coding. Often resistant to feedback, documentation, and improving team collaboration. π€ Cowboy coder: Writes code without tests, documentation, or team collaboration. Pushes directly to production without peer reviews or version control discipline. Prefers quick fixes over long-term maintainability, often breaking things. π€ AI coder: Great at prompting to generate code quickly. However, lacks deep understanding of business logic, struggles with complex problem solving, and may introduce subtle errors. π LinkedIn creator: Spends a majority of their free time researching trends and buzz words in the industry to craft high engagement posts with surface level knowledge of actual software development. Β 3 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
CosthaBidda Posted February 4 Report Share Posted February 4 2 minutes ago, socrates said: π² LeetCode warrior: Excels at algorithmic problems but lacks real-world software engineering skills. Over-engineers solutions, often ignoring maintainability and business needs. Struggles with system design, debugging, and writing clean, production-ready code. β¨ Hackathon enthusiast: Great at building quick prototypes but rarely finishes a polished product. Optimizes for speed and flashy demos rather than robustness and maintainability. π Trend chaser: Constantly talking about the latest JavaScript frameworks. Pushes new technologies onto the team without fully understanding them. Often leaves behind a trail of half-adopted, abandoned tools. π€ FP nerd: Insists on using functional programming in every scenario, even when impractical. Writes overly abstract code that confuses teammates unfamiliar with FP paradigms. Prefers theoretical purity over pragmatic solutions. πͺ Brogrammer: More focused on culture fit and team βvibesβ than actual engineering skills. Dismisses best practices in favor of quick-and-dirty coding. Often resistant to feedback, documentation, and improving team collaboration. π€ Cowboy coder: Writes code without tests, documentation, or team collaboration. Pushes directly to production without peer reviews or version control discipline. Prefers quick fixes over long-term maintainability, often breaking things. π€ AI coder: Great at prompting to generate code quickly. However, lacks deep understanding of business logic, struggles with complex problem solving, and may introduce subtle errors. π LinkedIn creator: Spends a majority of their free time researching trends and buzz words in the industry to craft high engagement posts with surface level knowledge of actual software development. Β AFDB content creators paristhithi enti? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
socrates Posted February 4 Author Report Share Posted February 4 10 minutes ago, CosthaBidda said: AFDB content creators paristhithi enti? just saw this in linkedin and shared here, its not my content Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
FrustratedVuncle Posted February 4 Report Share Posted February 4 46 minutes ago, socrates said: π² LeetCode warrior: Excels at algorithmic problems but lacks real-world software engineering skills. Over-engineers solutions, often ignoring maintainability and business needs. Struggles with system design, debugging, and writing clean, production-ready code. β¨ Hackathon enthusiast: Great at building quick prototypes but rarely finishes a polished product. Optimizes for speed and flashy demos rather than robustness and maintainability. π Trend chaser: Constantly talking about the latest JavaScript frameworks. Pushes new technologies onto the team without fully understanding them. Often leaves behind a trail of half-adopted, abandoned tools. π€ FP nerd: Insists on using functional programming in every scenario, even when impractical. Writes overly abstract code that confuses teammates unfamiliar with FP paradigms. Prefers theoretical purity over pragmatic solutions. πͺ Brogrammer: More focused on culture fit and team βvibesβ than actual engineering skills. Dismisses best practices in favor of quick-and-dirty coding. Often resistant to feedback, documentation, and improving team collaboration. π€ Cowboy coder: Writes code without tests, documentation, or team collaboration. Pushes directly to production without peer reviews or version control discipline. Prefers quick fixes over long-term maintainability, often breaking things. π€ AI coder: Great at prompting to generate code quickly. However, lacks deep understanding of business logic, struggles with complex problem solving, and may introduce subtle errors. π LinkedIn creator: Spends a majority of their free time researching trends and buzz words in the industry to craft high engagement posts with surface level knowledge of actual software development. Β Basically you dont want software engineers. Hence proved anesei igaΒ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.