It's OVER for CS majors.

Lulleko

Lulleko

Fixing God's mistakes
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I talked with a CS major (3rd year) in my uni today and he couldn't answer basic stuff like what's an array? difference between stack and heap? how to create an isolated environment for python? how does a unique pointer work?
Maybe I should apply to microsoft if this is what my competition will look like.
 
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they should goon collectively to save themselves from this catastrophy
 
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I talked with a CS major (3rd year) in my uni today and he couldn't answer basic stuff like what's an array? difference between stack and heap? how to create an isolated environment for python? how does a unique pointer work?
Maybe I should apply to microsoft if this is what my competition will look like.

ask chatgpt
 
CS majors should be called betabux in training
 
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But does he know how to search on stackoverflow?
 
But does he know how to search on stackoverflow?
These are kind that then complain why there's no jobs in the CS. Lmao @User28823
 
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cs major was in shanghai this year
 
its over for him specifically.

I knew what stack and heap was since i was 12

i now hold a degree in CS too
 
"Saar saar we find no job saar" nigger your competition are turbo normies that don't how their phones work
 
I talked with a CS major (3rd year) in my uni today and he couldn't answer basic stuff like what's an array? difference between stack and heap? how to create an isolated environment for python? how does a unique pointer work?
Maybe I should apply to microsoft if this is what my competition will look like.
I think he probably knew what they are but couldn't explain what it is. Like many CS majors in unis is very superficially taught and a lot of syllabus is covered very quickly for example I forgot something i was regularly implementing in programs was called inheritance classes. I know what they are and know everything there is to know about it but I forgot the theory about what Inheritances are, what hierarchical Inheritance is, multiple inheritance is etc. I have only been asked these types of CS theory questions in HR interviews.
 
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its over for him specifically.

I knew what stack and heap was since i was 12

i now hold a degree in CS too
I think he probably knew what they are but couldn't explain what it is. Like many CS majors taught in unis is very superficially taught and a lot of syllabus is taught very quickly for example I didn't know something i was regularly imolenting in programs was called inheritance classes. I know what they are and know everything there is to know about it but I forgot the theory about Inheritances are, what hierarchical Inheritances are etc. I have only been asked these types of CS theory questions in HR interviews.
 
@User28823 im sure even you forget this useless theory of what is called what too.
I think he probably knew what they are but couldn't explain what it is. Like many CS majors in unis is very superficially taught and a lot of syllabus is covered very quickly for example I forgot something i was regularly implementing in programs was called inheritance classes. I know what they are and know everything there is to know about it but I forgot the theory about what Inheritances are, what hierarchical Inheritance is, multiple inheritance is etc. I have only been asked these types of CS theory questions in HR interviews.
 
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I think he probably knew what they are but couldn't explain what it is. Like many CS majors in unis is very superficially taught and a lot of syllabus is covered very quickly for example I forgot know something i was regularly implementing in programs was called inheritance classes. I know what they are and know everything there is to know about it but I forgot the theory about what Inheritances are, what hierarchical Inheritance is, multiple inheritance etc. I have only been asked these types of CS theory questions in HR interviews.
This why tech is so shit nowadays, entire teams composed of overpaid leetcode monkeys clueless to what's happening, gta 6 will be a bloated 300 gb game mark my word.
Also how could you forget what inheritance classes are it's in the fucking name.
 
I talked with a CS major (3rd year) in my uni today and he couldn't answer basic stuff like what's an array? difference between stack and heap? how to create an isolated environment for python? how does a unique pointer work?
Maybe I should apply to microsoft if this is what my competition will look like.
I work with a coworker who is legitimately low iq af, I have no idea how he remains employed besides racial favoritism, can guess the race? :forcedsmile:

Most CS graduates are genuinely retarded and now with chatgpt its going to be even worse, just cheat on everything
 
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These questions are non-trivial btw, I know you can give surface level answers to all of them, but you can also make 1+ hour talks on them is my point.
 
This why tech is so shit nowadays, entire teams composed of overpaid leetcode monkeys clueless to what's happening, gta 6 will be a bloated 300 gb game mark my word.
Also how could you forget what inheritance classes are it's in the fucking name.
Not really I know the code that I am writing and perfectly understand how inheritance classes, Interfaces, Data abstraction works. Have written hundreds of programs that make use of this but its hard to remember the theory part of what is called what. Doesn't matter one bit in agile model of software development. If a mechanic doesnt know what some part in a car is called but can fix the car and understands what how the part works and what it does why does it matter?
 
@User28823 im sure even you forget this useless theory of what is called what too.
Yes

But its also difficult to fully grasp even simple things like OOP until you actually work in a large codebase and realize oh that's why polymorphism is a thing, that's why the factory pattern exists, etc.

The little projects they teach you in college didn't cut it for me, that's why I think internships early on are important so you can experience that moment of, oh that's why they taught me that / that's why that exists
 
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Yes

But its also difficult to fully grasp even simple things like OOP until you actually work in a large codebase and realize oh that's why polymorphism is a thing, that's why the factory pattern exists, etc.

The little projects they teach you in college didn't cut it for me, that's why I think internships early on are important so you can experience that moment of, oh that's why they taught me that / that's why that exists
I agree many concepts in programming seem trivial but make sense when you have to solve real world problems. Encapsulation, Version Control, Exception Handling are things that only started making sense when you are working on larger codebases where data redundancy, abstraction and user friendly interface is paramount. Learning it off a textbook hardly teaches you anything.
 
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STEMcels are so cringe.

While you learn how the stack, heap, addressing levels & real mode work, Chad learns how tits & pussy works since middle school.

So while he's allocating dynamic, heap amounts of tits & pussy on the daily, POPPING the stack nicely...

You incels are PUSH-ing "it's over" to the stack every single day, on repeat, never doing much else.
 
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Yes

But its also difficult to fully grasp even simple things like OOP until you actually work in a large codebase and realize oh that's why polymorphism is a thing, that's why the factory pattern exists, etc.

The little projects they teach you in college didn't cut it for me, that's why I think internships early on are important so you can experience that moment of, oh that's why they taught me that / that's why that exists
OOP is cringe tbh we should've just stuck with basic structs tbh.
 
I talked with a CS major (3rd year) in my uni today and he couldn't answer basic stuff like what's an array? difference between stack and heap? how to create an isolated environment for python? how does a unique pointer work?
Maybe I should apply to microsoft if this is what my competition will look like.
I was about to quit when I realized I had never even tried learning CS. Now I’m locking in
 
OOP is cringe tbh we should've just stuck with basic structs tbh.
Classic example of someone who hasn't worked on a real world problems that you were talking about @User28823 . Good luck trying to scale the program, avoiding cocurrency issues and do memory management. Its 10x harder without OOPs.
 
they just dont want to answer cause theyre preoccupied. path of least resistance. It's like Xangsane with his WDYM bullshit.
 
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OOP is cringe tbh we should've just stuck with basic structs tbh.
yeah there's also the learning and realization that its annoying af at times which also taught me why a lot of people hate on OOP
 
Yes

But its also difficult to fully grasp even simple things like OOP until you actually work in a large codebase and realize oh that's why polymorphism is a thing, that's why the factory pattern exists, etc.

The little projects they teach you in college didn't cut it for me, that's why I think internships early on are important so you can experience that moment of, oh that's why they taught me that / that's why that exists
allat when u couldve just bought $trump on launch:blackpill:
 
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Classic example of someone who hasn't worked on a real world problems that you were talking about @User28823 . Good luck trying to scale the program, avoiding cocurrency issues and do memory management. Its 10x harder without OOPs.
i agree with his sentiment though, its generally more enjoyable to not code in OOP
 
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honest reaction tbh
my honest reaction

1737222823814
 
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