Which language are we talking here? Cpp? Because typeof hasn't ever seemed useful to me in how I use cpp or how I have ever really used a language. I also remember it being criticized in java class more than 20 years ago when OOP was solely preached, even for scientific people like me.
PetDinosaurs
Ok. I'm also not crazy.
My hairline has started receding very rapidly. There's there's these fine hairs all over my desk, and I see the photo I took when joining directly before turning on my camera every meeting.
I do. I also have a PhD from a medical school. That's why I know if eating less milk were the best solution for this individual, they would have said that.
Managing parents' anxieties is a major part of being a pediatrician. You don't suggest things that might scare parents when they are not necessary.
Be nice.
Jesus Christ. Just be nice.
Why is no one on Lemmy nice.
Tell me about it...
I left my more mature company for a startup.
I feel like Tyler Durden sometimes.
A more standard definition in my tenure in academia is that scientists solve problems because they want to know the answer. Engineers solve problems because they want the problem to be solved.
In any case, the difference is just, heh, academic.
I'm very much the latter.
Who is saying that?
There's too much virtue signaling here. No engineer thinks poorly of the trades. That's the point of the conversation.
I just made a joke about how burger flippers can be called engineers, and I have a PhD.
Agreed.
I might also argue that those people are all still engineers.
Engineer just means "problem solver". Everyone gets paid for solving problems.
The real question in my head is how far does this go?
Sometimes the problem is that these burgers need flipping. Protein disk translocation engineers? I'm cool with that.
It looks exactly like c++ and c# and java and probably others.