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by Denzel
869 days ago
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Hillel Wayne offers a much better, more formally grounded survey of how software engineers compare to “real” engineers - https://www.hillelwayne.com/post/are-we-really-engineers/. He actually interviews civil engineers turned software engineers, among other “Crossovers” as he dubs them. Turns out, software engineering is as “real” as other types of engineering to crossovers who’ve done both. Software engineers just _think_ that other types of engineering are more real. The likelihood is low that Jon has spoken to any meaningful number of civil engineers in making his comparison to the software engineering field. Rather, he reasons from some idealized version of what he believes civil engineering to be. |
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Beyond that, I think the survey would need to expand the pool to a representative group working in software. Possibly those who studied CS, those who studied other fields, self-taught without formal higher education, and include people who studied (and possibly are licensed) software engineering, to provide a control group.
Even within the engineering field, not everyone is an engineer or practicing engineering. There are different levels of education and credentialing and those people fill useful positions. For some reason everyone in software insists that they are doing engineering and are an engineer without having studied any engineering topics. (I’m not talking about having to cover the chemistry, physics, differential equations and other topics that aren’t core to software.)