• @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    Good enough for someone to pay me for it. I’ve learned not to think too hard about it beyond that.

    • @rtxn
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      301 year ago

      “No, but somehow I got the job and I’m completely out of my depth.”

      • Endorkend
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        241 year ago

        I have that with management roles.

        Before I started working for myself, I would end up being the manager, every goddamn time.

        I’m a diagnosed autistic and am best if I just get a target to hit, no matter how elusive and unattainable and I WILL hit that target, even if I have to learn some obscure 1970’s COBOL dialect to do so.

        But nooo, they keep promoting me to management, because I natural take control of a groups workflow (only because I’m the person that sees the way to the target, when no one else can).

        Why not just let me be Senior and team lead instead of always making me a manager!

        • @rtxn
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          151 year ago

          Fellow autistic here. I’ve turned down advancement opportunities because they would’ve put me on the path towards middle management positions.

        • @Whelks_chance
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          41 year ago

          Well. Hmm. Gonna go do some introspection now.

      • datendefekt
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        21 year ago

        Are you me? I got a chance for a gig as enterprise architect and most of the time I have no idea what I’m doing.

  • Tamlyn
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    301 year ago

    Programming or knowledge about that has such a high ceiling that the own knowlege always looks like nothing. I always tell myself i do alright to turn down my insecrurities.

  • @[email protected]
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    231 year ago

    I mean that’s exactly me only that my boss and some coworkers who are super nerds keep praising my working-for-only-1-year-now ass so it’s a battle between insecurities and people telling me I’m doing good.

    • Chariotwheel
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      241 year ago

      I have an even bigger problem. I have no reference within my company, I am the one who knows the most about programming, which is why praise is inherently hollow because it comes from people who couldn’t make a proper judgement on that.

      It’s like me praising someone playing the piano. Like, I can tell if I like it, but this goes basically only to the point of recognize if someone just plays very badly or not.

      • SusheeMonster
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        1 year ago

        Your self-awareness is a good sign. My predecessor was a self-taught cowboy coder with no one to draw comparisons with. He was the lead (read: only) software engineer at my company, barring fresh graduates that didn’t know any better.

        Then I came along to point out all of his anti-patterns & cruft. By that point, he was too entrenched & self-assured in his abilities to listen to reason. Some people have imposter syndrome, others are imposters that failed upwards in spite of their incompetence.

        Sean, if you’re reading this - fuck you. I’m still coming across code you refuctored

      • @[email protected]
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        31 year ago

        You clearly have it worse. I find myself really lucky because I started out in a rather small company but with some very passionate programmers whom I can look up to.

    • @MajorHavoc
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      121 year ago

      Trust your coworkers. If you sucked, they wouldn’t be saying that.

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    I’ve seen the code scientists and engineers (not programmers) write. It’s real bad