(Note: the following is not criticism directed at you. I'm merely using your comment as a springboard for commentary about the industry on many matters you also show you are aware of.)
These things are highly subjective.
Yes.
leads them to judge your work in the harshest light instead of an evaluative one
Should any professionals have to present apologetics for others in his procession doing such a thing? We are all human beings, but shouldn't we be trying not to be this quickly and arbitrarily judgemental?
Speaking of burning irrational hatreds:
Somehow the social expectations of the programming profession are that we can get away with acting these out.
PLEASE DO NOT MIX TABS AND SPACES. Drives me nuts--I would have dinged you for that.
Yes. This can be problematic. The fact that it is still problematic after all these decades is a good indicator of how backwards we are as a profession.
If you look at the various analyses answering the op as detection of signalling -- well, it's all about signalling. I'm not so sure this is too much more substantive than an interview where you need to have the right school name on the right degree and a properly pressed suit.
>> leads them to judge your work in the harshest light instead of an evaluative one
> Should any professionals have to present apologetics for others in his procession doing such a thing? We are all human beings, but shouldn't we be trying not to be this quickly and arbitrarily judgemental
Well sure. But this is php we're talking about here.
These things are highly subjective.
Yes.
leads them to judge your work in the harshest light instead of an evaluative one
Should any professionals have to present apologetics for others in his procession doing such a thing? We are all human beings, but shouldn't we be trying not to be this quickly and arbitrarily judgemental?
Speaking of burning irrational hatreds:
Somehow the social expectations of the programming profession are that we can get away with acting these out.
PLEASE DO NOT MIX TABS AND SPACES. Drives me nuts--I would have dinged you for that.
Yes. This can be problematic. The fact that it is still problematic after all these decades is a good indicator of how backwards we are as a profession.
If you look at the various analyses answering the op as detection of signalling -- well, it's all about signalling. I'm not so sure this is too much more substantive than an interview where you need to have the right school name on the right degree and a properly pressed suit.