I would not have believed that someone could finish an entire website without understanding that there are two different machines involved - a client and a server.

The story that follows has been deduced from this user's question history and apparent overall intelligence.

It is not guaranteed to be 100% accurate.

This guy was contracted to write an internal web application for a company.

He knew nothing about ASP.NET, so he decided to try to learn about it.

However, he apparently gave up that hope, and wrote the website by asking nearly 150 questions on Stack Overflow.

Now, he's finished, and, as he tries to upload the site to the production server, still doesn't realize that there are two different machines involved. (All of his development was done on localhost)

If you work for the company that outsourced this project, cancel the project before it's too late.

</rant>


Now, for the question: What should we do about this "programmer" and similar users?

For example, should we add a Flag as Incompetent link that triggers a You should change careers banner with a link to McDonalds' recruiting?

EDIT:

No-one has mentioned one of the primary reasons that I asked this question.

What if he's hired by your bank?

share|improve this question
10  
If you work for the company that outsourced this project, cancel the project before it's too late. I feel that it might already be too late. – perbert Mar 9 '10 at 19:53
@Dominic: stackoverflow.com/questions/1622998/… – SLaks Mar 9 '10 at 19:57
4  
It seems that he also has used suckpuppets on the past... stackoverflow.com/questions/1713871/… stackoverflow.com/questions/1598730/… – perbert Mar 9 '10 at 20:01
1  
@voyager: I seem to remember flagging someone like this for sock-puppetry; I don't know if it was this exact user, but apparently I've visited his profile before. – mmyers Mar 9 '10 at 20:15
35  
Creating a sock puppet account; accepting own answers using that account; leaving a "thank you" note to yourself in the comments and addressing yourself with your (wrongly spelled) last name; and then having those accounts merged deserves a new badge, priceless. Please implement post haste. – Pekka 웃 Mar 9 '10 at 20:59
4  
Justice will be served if this guy's contracting company finds this thread. – Ether Mar 9 '10 at 21:13
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It is for this reason that people should not go for the "bargain" programmers... – Earlz Mar 9 '10 at 21:19
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Ironically, he/she/it has not bothered to cast more than a single upvote! – Mehrdad Afshari Mar 9 '10 at 21:28
3  
He posted his email address! stackoverflow.com/questions/1519274/… – SLaks Mar 9 '10 at 22:58
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@SLaks: It strikes me that he adresses everyone with Mr. but not Jon Skeet :) – fretje Mar 9 '10 at 23:30
4  
I really had great, great fun with this today, and my tummy still hurts from laughing. On second thought, though, I think @ChristopheD does have a point. Attacking him here by name is quite massive. I'm editing out his name realizing that the point is moot because it still remains in @voyager's comment, but still. I think we should remove mentions of his name from the page so he can't be Googled. – Pekka 웃 Mar 10 '10 at 2:24
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@Pekka: out of respect for the Software industry, I propose we put his name back, so that he can be Googled. – John Saunders Mar 10 '10 at 3:18
4  
@waiwai: what if he's hired by your bank's QA division? – John Saunders Mar 10 '10 at 15:58
3  
@John Saunders re your comment March 10 3:18: I share your sentiment, but apart from some hilariously stupid sock-puppeteering, I can't see that he done anything wrong as such. I can see no indication the guy is actually offering services as an ASP expert. He's not guilty of anything but of using SO as a support resource in an area he knows nothing about. IMO it's fine to make fun of him on Meta, but not to burn his name on Google like that, and to possibly seriously jeopardize his career (whatever his day job is.) And the guy isn't actually working for a bank, nor is he planning to, is he? – Pekka 웃 Mar 11 '10 at 11:46
4  
@SLaks, you seem to be saying he is in some way unique or unusual in our industry (IT). Sadly if he's hired by my bank I'm sure he'll have many colleagues at a similar level of skill. Thinking you have any way to convince someone over the internet to change careers is pretty naive. – user135186 Mar 14 '10 at 2:17
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closed as not constructive by Bart, jonsca, Toon Krijthe, Martijn Pieters, Bo Persson Nov 3 '12 at 10:55

As it currently stands, this question is not a good fit for our Q&A format. We expect answers to be supported by facts, references, or specific expertise, but this question will likely solicit debate, arguments, polling, or extended discussion. If you feel that this question can be improved and possibly reopened, see the FAQ for guidance.

8 Answers

Well, now he knows something about programming so I guess SO is a success. Doesn't say anywhere that SO is only for the already competent. As far as the contracting company, caveat emptor...

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Looking at his questions, can you really say that he knows anything about programming? stackoverflow.com/questions/1519274/… – SLaks Mar 9 '10 at 19:55
3  
He knows enough to make something work on localhost. – squillman Mar 9 '10 at 19:55
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Knows enough or pasted enough? – SLaks Mar 9 '10 at 19:57
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Heh. Still gotta paste it in the right place... – squillman Mar 9 '10 at 20:02
@squillman True. You've got to know something to know where to paste something else. – Jonathan Sampson Mar 9 '10 at 20:12
5  
Ever heard of trial and error? – perbert Mar 9 '10 at 20:13
@voyager Sure, but consider the number of places you could paste things :) If you successfully integrate a bunch of individual scripts written by individual people, you've got to know something. – Jonathan Sampson Mar 9 '10 at 20:18
12  
@Jonathan: you'd be surprised... The work of a Cargo Cult Programmer is full of shapes, rituals and incantations that he thinks are important somehow, but he couldn't tell you why beyond, "I saw something similar in a sample somewhere..." – Shog9 Mar 9 '10 at 21:32
1  
@Jonathan, @squillman: You're giving him too much credit. – fretje Mar 9 '10 at 23:33
@fretje: yes, I'll definitely concede that point. Will still stand behind my answer, though. – squillman Mar 10 '10 at 0:30
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two words: infinite monkeys... – quack quixote Mar 10 '10 at 5:38
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Isn't this what TDD is all about? Write the tests, and then copy/paste/cut/repeat until they pass. – balpha Mar 10 '10 at 6:54
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@balpha: Yep, exactly! But due to time and budget constraints, he has decided to cut the tests. Left with cut and paste only. – Mehrdad Afshari Mar 12 '10 at 23:24
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@squillman: yes, he may know something about programming - at least a little more than before his battery of questions. He's taken plenty - now I'd like to see a return on the community's investment. – IAbstract Mar 25 '10 at 18:03
@dboarman: no argument from me on that! – squillman Mar 25 '10 at 19:19
show 1 more comment

Don't do it.

My reasons, on a scale of negative to positive.

Natural Selection: Any company that couldn't weed out such blatant incompetence in either an interview ("tell me about a project you've done. It was an ASP.NET application? That recorded sound? That used Flash? Which was embedded in a WebBrowser control in a C# application?") deserves to employ him. Let natural selection do its work.

Our Purpose: We're here to help, not to be vigilantes. Especially bad to single him out on this question (name has been removed already.) Bad Google-karma could destroy a subject's chance at a career indefinitely, regardless of whether he improves in the future. All you need is some blogger linking here and pointing out "look what Stack Overflow is up to these days." IMHO, If you want to mess up someone's life, keep it off the Trilogy sites. That's what 4chan is for.

Motivations: A lot of what I'll call "blue-collar developers" come from places where software pays many times more than what the alternatives pay (i.e. still many times less than what non-outsourcing shops pay.) Even here in the US, I know a lot of guys who go to community colleges and get IT degrees because IT pays (and it beats digging ditches). Telling them to 'get a different job' makes no sense to them. They didn't get into the industry because they have a passion for it or are good at it. Some dude they don't know telling them to give up their attempt to make a good living is going to sound pretty preachy when they're just after a good paycheck.

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4  
+1, my thoughts exactly – Mark Pim Mar 10 '10 at 9:05

I think Stack Overflow is only concerned with the specific questions being asked, and not what they reflect in his personal life. If he asks how to split a string based on every third character, fine. If he's asking this because somebody hired him to format a credit card number, and they think this would be a neat format, that's his problem, not ours.

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6  
Yes, but we have professional ethics, and I agree with the OP that somehow it's not right to let this guy continue on in our world sullying our profession... – Ether Mar 9 '10 at 20:51
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@Ether That's a highly subjective issue though. I'm sure there are plenty of programmers out there who would say the same of me :) – Jonathan Sampson Mar 9 '10 at 21:01
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We have no problem discontinuing you also, @Jon. If you feel better, file it under "collateral damage". – Ladybug Killer Mar 9 '10 at 23:29
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@Ether I agree that SO should foster professional ethics as well as programming knowledge, but I don't believe it's any of our places to say who's a good and who's not a good programmer - that's for hiring managers - a company that hires bad programmers won't make that mistake for long... – Mark Pim Mar 9 '10 at 23:45
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@Mark: if we have eyes, if we have brains at all, then we can, without trying, see what kind of programmer this guy is. We can choose to ignore it, or to just laugh at him and take no further actions, but we can't choose to not see it, unless we close our eyes and turn off our brains. – John Saunders Mar 10 '10 at 3:19

If you work for the company that outsourced this project, cancel the project before it's too late.

If you work for the company that outsourced this project, you might spend more time evaluating your contractors before awarding your next project.

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6  
I would have thought that was implied. – SLaks Mar 9 '10 at 22:27
You may also spend more time evaluating the longevity of your employment. – IAbstract Mar 25 '10 at 18:09

I feel that (even here on meta.stackoverflow.com) there's no reason to launch a named ad hominem ~attack~ (I agree attack may be a bit harsh a term) based on a person's perceived abilities and/or skill level.

Since his full name is on here it could remain retrievable by possible employers years later ; even if he has progressed/learned a lot in the meantime.

This could also be emotionally devastating for the person in question: consider how you would feel if you noticed that you were promoted to the 'laughing-stock' of this online community...

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7  
This is not so much about what this user has done or not, but rather about establishing policies for us to follow when encountering a user like this one. Links or didn't happen is a mantra around here. SLaks did the right thing by providing links. We can't damage his reputation more than he has already damaged with his own questions. – perbert Mar 9 '10 at 21:41
6  
What voyager said. Any potential employer who bothers to google the name will surely find the questions on SO before finding this... But I highly suspect he's not employed by an organization who actually uses his output. – Shog9 Mar 9 '10 at 21:48
@voyager, @Shog9: I agree completely that this must be discussable right here. But my gut feel just tells me (some warped netiquette maybe) that the OP could have said 'this user' (and then linked to the profile) instead of 'citing' the full name (which is on the profile anyway). If the user in question chooses to use his full name for his profile; that's obviously his choice. But if he -in the future- chooses to rename that profile, he'll still be linked here with his full name (and in the comments of course). – ChristopheD Mar 9 '10 at 21:53
1  
Well... It's a CW question. You could edit it if you feel strongly... – Shog9 Mar 9 '10 at 22:08
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@Shog9: I know, but I generally prefer to refrain from editing another user's question (apart from blatant formatting / spelling issues). It feels a bit aggressive and could be an incentive for editing wars... – ChristopheD Mar 9 '10 at 22:40
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Bah, could be... but you'll never know unless you try it. ;-) – Shog9 Mar 9 '10 at 22:42
@ChristophD There is little chance of an edit war, without him around. (He is still in the penalty box until next February) – Brad Gilbert Mar 10 '10 at 3:42

I can't believe you are on to my sock puppet account.

Waffles is getting upset!

alt text

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2  
O.o I don't get what the Constanza is George doing in your answer... – perbert Mar 10 '10 at 3:29

Although this whole thread has derailed into a big

Ha-ha!

the point remains:

What should we do about this "programmer" and similar users?

What can we do? Mock him until he leaves? Try to push him towards programming illumination through

?

hurt him?

I don't know.

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Fell free to turn this into something coherent. Good luck, you will need it. – perbert Mar 10 '10 at 3:43

You're not a professor in university, who checks if students don't cheat. That guy gets the work done (doesn't he?), so is there anything you should be worried about?

(But actually this stuff makes my soul cry "ffs, hire me instead!")

share|improve this answer
1  
does he actually get work done? if you follow his train of questions, it's pretty obvious he's going to deliver something that isn't going to meet any of the requirements of what he was asked to build. – Jimmy Mar 10 '10 at 1:03

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