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I dunno, a programmer who can't think about algorithmic complexity isn't actually going to be all that useful.



How useful is the guy who thinks about algorithmic complexity but doesn't code?

At the end of the day, someone's got to write the code that runs on your servers. It doesn't magically transfer from that paper covered in pencil markings.

The actual conclusion of the piece made sense to me- all 3 were worthy of offers, for different reasons. Not hiring all three has less to do with how good the economy is (that was a non-sequitor) and more to do with the needs of the particular company at this particular moment. Right now they need people to design algorithms and to code.

They need both, and their company doesn't advance if they only have one and not the other.


depends on what they work on, business applications in large organizations we tend to direct programmers through reams of project documentation, from top level to familiarize them with what the overall direction is to technical documents which specify exactly the formulas to be used at all levels of calculation. These formula and related specification does include the number of decimals to use within calculation, rounding, and resulting decimal precision.

yeah its nice if they understand it all but programming isn't all shoot from the hip, many work in very structured environments which is more true when projects can have more than a dozen programmers on just one machine. Throw in three or more touch points and I am more concerned you follow the technical than branch out with your own ideas




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