i saw someone on twitter saying to “leverage your network” i’d sooner leverage a shotgun into my mouth jesus fucking christ

plus all this is meant to be done at a time when you’re likely at your lowest confidence, most insecure, and most desperate.

just the idea that it’s my job to sell myself to these sorts of business goons who ENJOY seeing people desperate and on edge is so sick. i have nothing to sell, i am not a commodity, i am a human being. and everything’s ran thru some shitty AI now i’m sure. like the applications weren’t demeaning enough.

can’t we all just be assigned jobs by the government? it’d build social cohesion. like the hunger games. maybe you can opt out but I’d rather take my chances than answer these fucking personality tests or get so hopeless i’m actually applying for something with hours I hate with a miserable commute with a terrible wage which ALSO won’t hire me

  • pixxelkick@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago
    1. LinkedIn is fine, my past 2 contracts both were off LinkedIn

    2. Yes, include keywords but spread them out, absolutely. Also include them in your cover letter.

    3. Don’t use headhunters, but you can use recruiters.

    4. Pick a specific tech stack to specialize in, one that is popular abd high demand. 100% yes you should have a portfolio using that tech you can link to on your resume or applications. Focus on applying to the smaller but refined pool of jobs that explicitly need the exact tech stack you have in your portfolio.

    Example: I specialized in .NET tech stack. C#, azure, EF Core, NUnit, Sql Server, etc etc. The full windows stack.

    It’s a super popular stack, and there’s tonnes of demand. I don’t waste my time applying for python or c++ or lua or go or rust jobs. I stick to my stack.

    I have many projects on my github using that stack, including install instructions, releases, docker containers, etc etc.

    As a result I can talk about the tech used in these stacks extensively, I know them like the back of my hand. I have strong opinions on patterns with them, I can teach others about them, etc.

    • AnarchistArtificer@slrpnk.net
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      9 months ago

      What’s the strongest opinion you have on the stack you know (or one of its elements)? Not necessarily “interview-safe” opinions

      • pixxelkick@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        I despise the current paradigm of mock’ing everything, abstracting everything, and unit testing 100% cide coverage for no logical reason.

        Instead I only unit test the following:

        1. Any code I truly want to unit test, because it does something that is iffy on if it works or not, I break out into atomic logic that can very easily unit test.

        2. Code coverage is a business requirement and we already have 100% coverage from integration tests, then I’ll start worrying about unit testing the shit out of stuff.

        In other words if you waste time on mindless unit tests to assert that 1+1=2 when you dont have 100% coverage on your integration tests yet, you are wasting time.

        In terms of atomic code, consider this example:

        public class StudentService(IStudentRepository repo)
        {
        
            public bool AnyGrade12()
            {
                var students = repo.GetStudents();
                return students.Any(s => s.Grade == 12);
            }
        }
        

        This would be very normal as a pattern to see, but I hate it because to test it, now I need to mock a stubbed in IStudentRepository.

        Consider this instead:

        public static class StudentService
        {
        
            public static bool AnyGrade12(IEnumerable students)
            {
                return students.Any(s => s.Grade == 12);
            }
        }
        

        Now this is what I consider atomic logic. The rule of thumb is, if the class has no dependencies or all it’s dependencies are atomic, it too is atomic.

        Generally it becomes clear all the atomic logic can just be declared as static classes pain-free, and there’s no need to abstract it. It’s trivial to unit test, and you don’t have to mock anything.

        Any remaining non-atomic code should end up as anything you simply must integration test against (3rd party api calls, database queries, that sort of stuff)

        You’ll also often find many of your atomic functions naturally and smoothly slot into becoming just extension functions.

        This approach goes very much against the grain of every dotnet team I’ve worked with, but once I started demoing how it works and they saw how my unit tests became much less convoluted while still hitting ~90% code coverage, some folks started to get on board with the paradigm.