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Programmer's roll call {the coder's thread}
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| Akridrot |
Who programs in here? You don't have to post your info, you can just say what you do... and discuss all code related things.
Me:
Languages: perl, php
Age: 18
Experience: A few months
Notable pieces of work: N/A :o
Currently messing about with perl ("Only perl can parse Perl"), and trying to step up my regular expression skills. It's a fun language. php sucks, but I have to learn it as well...
I love using IDEs. Also, I just tried out wget yesterday and it is AWESOME. :D |
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| Boomer187 |
| I used to do some php projects n stuff, but no more. but I still know most of it. |
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| Audigy7 |
| Learning C++ at the moment and I'm having a blast with it. Not quite as fun as Visual Basic, but still quite interesting. |
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| _Nut_ |
Languages: perl, html, Fortran, some c, c shell scripting, javascript, python, arcobjects, some VB and learning mySQL
Age: 25
Experience: 3 years
Notable pieces of work: Nothing publicly available. All for use with in house programs. |
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| kid nyce |
Ahh, I don't know how I can contribute to this thread
I wouldn't consider myself a programmer, more like an application developer, analyst, power user of company systems, etc
for real programming, oop, and api etc...
vb, c++, html, some php mysql, oracle 9i/11i, crystal reports, discoverer and optio environments with production and user acceptance testing environments, ms access, some data manipulation techniques for low level systems like Outlook and Act...
the list goes on and on as some of the low level applications (like excel) require vb scripting for a client side application GUI dev for table data.
experience wise - 3+ years career driven experience, 2+ years interning as a network infrastructure admin and assistant. have worked pretty much on a lot of power user committees for company wide application roll outs, ie: oracle 11i, also act as a company sponsored trainer for these applications...thats the worst part of my job is to train people on these new systems that I just recently learned, so the curve for me is much sharper than the natural bell curve most of the companies users are on.
certified in Discoverer/Optio and Business Objects/WebIntelligence - both front end reporting systems to an Oracle 9i/11i backend.
i straddle sales, marketing, finance, and operations so my hands are in pretty much every systematic approach the company plans on taking. this flexibility allows me to be on the board for most decision making processes when deciding what applications best fit the needs of the users of the company.
notable pieces of work?
Changing the Editorial Process in which a Book is published by instituting technological advances in areas which were previously done manually. This change came with a corporate achievement award for the practice and implementation of a division wide process/protocol.
Currently employed at a F500 Publishing Company, The McGraw-Hill Companies, specifically in the Professional Division. |
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| Paulie |
VB, SQL, LotusScript, Javascript, HTML...
Mainly doing Lotusscript atm its so boring... |
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| Timski |
hehe do you get to whip out the old fortran knowledge much Nut?
I am not a programmer by trade (I am a sys admin/Network consultant), I used to around with Java & Javascript also played with php when I do web design on the side so I know all the other web languages. html, xml... etc
You guys can have your programming I cant stand it... If we need you one day and your from Mo town Australia I might hunt one of you down, thanks for starting this thread! |
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| Akridrot |
| quote: | Originally posted by Timski
thanks for starting this thread! |
There's not that many programmers in this forum. That saddens me. :( |
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| DjConfessions |
C++, VB6 and Java
but that was YEARRRRRRRRRRS ago |
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| _Nut_ |
| quote: | Originally posted by Timski
hehe do you get to whip out the old fortran knowledge much Nut?
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This is only a language I use because many of our meteorological programs were written in that years and years ago. I took the class for it in college, and use/write/modify things daily. But for a first choice... no way. This is a dead language in my eyes. |
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| Timski |
| Thats awesome, I love how there is still programs & systems running in the oldest languages possible. There are still banks the world over running on Cobol apparently so the specialists who know it get paid quite handsomely. |
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| _Nut_ |
| We still use them because they are written and done, and function. No one wants to take the time to rewrite tens of thousands of lines of code into another language. |
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