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in reply to Re: I've had my current job for
in thread I've had my current job for

Shocked look? Hardly. I work for a tier 1 automotive supplier in their "Technology Development" group, incharge of developing new projects within our current platforms, and I'm one of two with a CS degree, except for our manager, and he probably hasn't written a line of code for about 7 years. When I start talking about passing pointers, scope and polymorphism, everyone gets that blank stare that roughly equates too "I know everything you just said was english, but I'm sorry, most of it didn't register as having any meaning."

It's frustrating, really. I work really hard to set a good example to those in the group coming from MIS and that think VB is the end all be all of the programming lingua franca (Not that I have a problem with VB, use it myself sometimes, but...). Things like:

But it doesn't always stick. *sigh*

Edit: chipmunk 2001-05-20

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Speaking in Tongues
by Vynce (Friar) on May 23, 2001 at 14:29 UTC
    well, actually, it isn't all english. i mean, the ones you cite are all derived from english, at least, but "grep" certainly isn't, and i don't think "polymorphism" is used to mean anything really recognizable as what we use it to mean.
    programmers just make more sense to each other than we do to "people". but i digress, i'm sure. probably comes from being unemployed so long.

      Actually, 'grep' is, in fact, derived from English: "Globally search for the Regular Expression and Print".