• @abhibeckert
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    1 year ago

    That’s nice and all, but if you submit your array reversing code to me for peer review, I’m going to ask our boss for a private meeting, where I will ask him to fire you. And if you were just hired a week ago… you’d still be on probation and very easy to fire, we’ll just call up one of the other job applicants for your position and see if they’re interested.

    Don’t waste my time by asking me to review unnecessarily complex code. Also we have enough bugs already and you seem to be going out of your way to introduce even more.

    For the record - the right way to reverse an array in PHP is like this: array_reverse($array). And if that’s too slow… just don’t reverse it at all. Use -- instead of ++ in your for loop.

    (PS: Ugh. Lemmy sucks for posting code… didn’t like some of the symbols and ate my whole comment. Had to write it twice. Sorry the first one was better)

    • davawen
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      81 year ago

      That’s not the point of the article though. Reversing an array is simply an exemple of a very simple CS puzzle. Of course it’s common enough to have a builtin function. No, this won’t be written in a code base, or asked for a code review. That’s not the point.

      • @abhibeckert
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        1 year ago

        My point is I don’t like complex solutions to simple problems.

        • @[email protected]
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          41 year ago

          It’s an algorithm question. If somebody gave me your solution in an interview I would ask them to solve the problem without a dependency. These questions are about demonstrating your ability to code whilst understanding space & time complexity.