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by ufmace
20 days ago
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I wonder if there's a class of people who managed to get CS degrees but really aren't that good. To them, it might feel more like either you remember the perfect and optimal but complex solution you were taught in a class, or you don't happen to remember it and are completely stuck and can't make any progress at all. I don't think I'd want to hire or work with somebody who can't come up with some sort of solution after thinking through it for a few minutes. In fact, coming up with the CS-perfect solution immediately may be a bit of an anti-signal. I want the person who can think their way through to a solution to a problem that's new to them reasonably well. The fact that you happened to have memorized the best algorithm for this and can recite it on command doesn't tell me much useful, because nobody has the perfect algorithm for everything memorized. |
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This is a horrible over-generalization, but it seems to me that at least for last 10 years or so colleges are creating students who are more like systems integrators (glorified stack overflow cut-and-pasters) than developers who can equally well think for themselves and derive things from scratch.
I learned to program in the late 70's in the 8-bit home computer era, and developers of my generation had no choice but to write most of everything from scratch, other than implementing a few well known published algorithms. You approached everything from a perspective of "how can I solve this problem?" rather than "what can I find to solve this problem for me?". Additionally due to severe hardware constraints (speed, memory) we had to always be creative and think outside the box - the mentality was that nothing was impossible, just a matter of finding the best solution.