Been at this company for 4 months as a data engineer. When I started their codebase was a mess. All the code was in one folder with subfolders, the scripts were dependent on one another even if they didn’t share the domain problem, their version control was “call the IT guy to grab the backup”. In the first few months I set up a Github organization for them, put all their code into a git repo to start version control, got them to install and use IDEs instead of just VS Code, refactored some of the codebase to use SOLID standards, automated some tasks, transitioned them to a new Snowflake warehouse, and fixed several issues that was breaking their workflow. Today the CEO told me that this is an at-will state and he let me go. Didn’t explain why, just asked for the equipment back.

I didn’t get any write-ups, no one complained about my work, I was always looking for improvements, even the CEO thanked me a couple months ago for writing a word document to my managers on how I think the team can make improvements. They actually followed that doc and have been happy with it. This came from nowhere because no one brought any complaints. Today I am lost. I just need to vent and let this out.

  • @[email protected]
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    101 year ago

    Yeah I have no idea what that’s about. Close to 90% of my friends in a variety of senior engineering roles use VSCode as their IDE.

    In a low-rev startup, dropping $1000’s per annum on Jetbrains or whatever would just be insanity.

    • @jpeps
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      11 year ago

      That statement and the complaint that the ‘code is just a folder full of subfolders’ perplexed me. Are we not using folders anymore?

      VS Code is absolutely an IDE, for many many frameworks and languages.