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But lately I've been thinking that janitorial work is a lot more rewarding.
Marc
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Not necessarily[^]; it depends upon the type and grade of, er, muck you have to clean up.
Software Zen: delete this;
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I work in infrastructure, but i'm not a manager... so not sure what i would be described as... i guess the best answer would be clistctrl
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StevenWalsh wrote: clistctrl
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come on... its a codeproject tradition (at least when theres a fill in the blank slot) to put clistctrl as one of the answers
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Of course! CListCtrl is a suitable answer for all questions! It is even more accurate than answering "42".
In fact, you can answer arbitrary questions with CListCtrl . E.g.:
Q: "Do you love me?"
A: "CListCtrl "
Q: "What time is it?"
A: "CListCtrl "
Q: "My hovercraft is full of eels?"
A: "CListCtrl "
And, of course
Q: "How to display a list of data with icons in MFC?"
A: "CListCtrl "
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Uwe Keim wrote: My hovercraft is full of eels?"
[Insert Witty Sig Here]
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... given that I have all of the departmental sh!t jobs: I write the installers for our products, I write all of the public-facing documentation (public means the rest of the company), I keep the build machine and our automated build process working, plus I'm the SourceSafe data base administrator/guru/guy-with-the-plunger-when-the-DB-gets-scrogged .
Software Zen: delete this;
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I find the choices limited...
I decide what we need, design it, build it, program it if it needs programming, and fix it if it's broke. Who needs specialists?;P
"A Journey of a Thousand Rest Stops Begins with a Single Movement"
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but an "architect" is some one who designs houses. I would never describe myself as that, I don't need the ego trip
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ed welch wrote: an "architect" is some one who designs houses
Amen. My father is an architect and he doesn't know anything about software development.
Well, most "software architects" don't either
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Nemanja Trifunovic wrote: Well, most "software architects" don't either
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I am developer/architect by poll. I research new algorithms, design software, and impliment the design by writing code. Since I am in an R&D field it is hard to split these since I have to develop the algorithm before I code it, which sometimes takes a long time depending on the new capability needed. So months I am primarily an architect, some months primarily a developer. Even asking for a majority is difficult. But I put developer mostly because I would rather not be considered ONLY an architect.
_________________________
Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau.
Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)
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I guess they should have had an analyst option :p
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I still prefer one-man shop. Documentation, design, coding, teaching, presentations.
_________________________
Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau.
Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)
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And there aren't any Text answers too!
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Vasudevan Deepak Kumar wrote: And there aren't any Text answers too!
and I'm wondering what will happen to CListCtrl
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I also was split by this poll. However I would more likely fall into the Student/Developer. I am an Intern with the company I'm currently employed by, but one that has been developing business applications for about 2 1/2 years.
I put student because I think I know a little bit about a little bit right now but I learn something new every time I log onto my machine.
An American football fan -
Go Seahawks!
Lil Turtle
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Chris McGlothen wrote: I put student because I think I know a little bit about a little bit right now but I learn something new every time I log onto my machine.
If that day ever stops, seriously look for why. I have learned something new every day of my life. There are those who think I know everything, I promise I do not, far from it. The day I stop learning, the funeral will be the same week.
_________________________
Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau.
Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)
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unless you die closer to the end of the week!
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I agree with this. I'm an intern as well, and the things that I enjoy the most involve learning new things and keeping up to pace with technology or trying out things that I haven't done before. Unfortunately, there are times when the roles I'm given don't involve a great deal of creativity (but that can be helped by spending time working on personal projects at home).
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