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#This is neat.

This is neat.

I took the C# and Unity tests.

A couple of the questions felt really obscure (eg. "When would you use the platform #define directives?") or something I hadn't come across yet (eg. "What is the purpose of the masking part of an animation clip?" or another one about hot keys that I just plain don't use). But I suppose that is what would distinguish an expert user from a beginning user!

The "one free retake" is very nice. Used it for the C# test (which I did first, as it was presented up front and I had to dig a little to find the Unity one). There were a few questions that I got wrong and went "oh, duh" (e.g. "which alternative expression would give exactly the same string value?" with the answer of "The code is\r\n3\\48-\"apple\"\\r\\n", I'd been squinting at that answer and another, and had trouble seeing the difference between them: double backslashes vs \r\n. It had sort of turned into symbolic soup under the time pressure).

Scored in the 230s for both and added both to my developer profile.

#But...

But...

Only technical problem I had was that I inadvertently double-clicked at one point and got a question wrong before I'd even read it. Might want to enforce a bit of input delay! The same kind of "prevent clicks" like during the review queues, just to make sure people are actually reading the question. I'm not sure I'd have gotten the question right even if I'd been able to read it, but it was a problem that I didn't get the opportunity.

I'm considering taking some others, but I know I'm significantly less skilled in the other skill paths that are currently available. e.g. I could take one of the Photoshop assessments but I actually don't use Photoshop proper, so I'm sure there'd be a question where my response would be "Heck if I know, but I know how to do this in GIMP!" and I'm concerned that a lower score displayed on my developer story would actually hurt me more than help.

That is, I don't know if these are going to be viewed as "icing" or "cake." Clearly the intent is for the scoring to be supplementary, but I'm worried that hiring managers are going to boil a profile down into a handful of numbers and say "this guy scored low on some of his skills and displayed them? Skip!" instead of "this guy is an expert in what we need, and is well rounded with a few other skills. Hired!"

#This is neat.

I took the C# and Unity tests.

A couple of the questions felt really obscure (eg. "When would you use the platform #define directives?") or something I hadn't come across yet (eg. "What is the purpose of the masking part of an animation clip?" or another one about hot keys that I just plain don't use). But I suppose that is what would distinguish an expert user from a beginning user!

The "one free retake" is very nice. Used it for the C# test (which I did first, as it was presented up front and I had to dig a little to find the Unity one). There were a few questions that I got wrong and went "oh, duh" (e.g. "which alternative expression would give exactly the same string value?" with the answer of "The code is\r\n3\\48-\"apple\"\\r\\n", I'd been squinting at that answer and another, and had trouble seeing the difference between them: double backslashes vs \r\n. It had sort of turned into symbolic soup under the time pressure).

Scored in the 230s for both and added both to my developer profile.

#But...

Only technical problem I had was that I inadvertently double-clicked at one point and got a question wrong before I'd even read it. Might want to enforce a bit of input delay! The same kind of "prevent clicks" like during the review queues, just to make sure people are actually reading the question. I'm not sure I'd have gotten the question right even if I'd been able to read it, but it was a problem that I didn't get the opportunity.

I'm considering taking some others, but I know I'm significantly less skilled in the other skill paths that are currently available. e.g. I could take one of the Photoshop assessments but I actually don't use Photoshop proper, so I'm sure there'd be a question where my response would be "Heck if I know, but I know how to do this in GIMP!" and I'm concerned that a lower score displayed on my developer story would actually hurt me more than help.

That is, I don't know if these are going to be viewed as "icing" or "cake." Clearly the intent is for the scoring to be supplementary, but I'm worried that hiring managers are going to boil a profile down into a handful of numbers and say "this guy scored low on some of his skills and displayed them? Skip!" instead of "this guy is an expert in what we need, and is well rounded with a few other skills. Hired!"

This is neat.

I took the C# and Unity tests.

A couple of the questions felt really obscure (eg. "When would you use the platform #define directives?") or something I hadn't come across yet (eg. "What is the purpose of the masking part of an animation clip?" or another one about hot keys that I just plain don't use). But I suppose that is what would distinguish an expert user from a beginning user!

The "one free retake" is very nice. Used it for the C# test (which I did first, as it was presented up front and I had to dig a little to find the Unity one). There were a few questions that I got wrong and went "oh, duh" (e.g. "which alternative expression would give exactly the same string value?" with the answer of "The code is\r\n3\\48-\"apple\"\\r\\n", I'd been squinting at that answer and another, and had trouble seeing the difference between them: double backslashes vs \r\n. It had sort of turned into symbolic soup under the time pressure).

Scored in the 230s for both and added both to my developer profile.

But...

Only technical problem I had was that I inadvertently double-clicked at one point and got a question wrong before I'd even read it. Might want to enforce a bit of input delay! The same kind of "prevent clicks" like during the review queues, just to make sure people are actually reading the question. I'm not sure I'd have gotten the question right even if I'd been able to read it, but it was a problem that I didn't get the opportunity.

I'm considering taking some others, but I know I'm significantly less skilled in the other skill paths that are currently available. e.g. I could take one of the Photoshop assessments but I actually don't use Photoshop proper, so I'm sure there'd be a question where my response would be "Heck if I know, but I know how to do this in GIMP!" and I'm concerned that a lower score displayed on my developer story would actually hurt me more than help.

That is, I don't know if these are going to be viewed as "icing" or "cake." Clearly the intent is for the scoring to be supplementary, but I'm worried that hiring managers are going to boil a profile down into a handful of numbers and say "this guy scored low on some of his skills and displayed them? Skip!" instead of "this guy is an expert in what we need, and is well rounded with a few other skills. Hired!"

Source Link

#This is neat.

I took the C# and Unity tests.

A couple of the questions felt really obscure (eg. "When would you use the platform #define directives?") or something I hadn't come across yet (eg. "What is the purpose of the masking part of an animation clip?" or another one about hot keys that I just plain don't use). But I suppose that is what would distinguish an expert user from a beginning user!

The "one free retake" is very nice. Used it for the C# test (which I did first, as it was presented up front and I had to dig a little to find the Unity one). There were a few questions that I got wrong and went "oh, duh" (e.g. "which alternative expression would give exactly the same string value?" with the answer of "The code is\r\n3\\48-\"apple\"\\r\\n", I'd been squinting at that answer and another, and had trouble seeing the difference between them: double backslashes vs \r\n. It had sort of turned into symbolic soup under the time pressure).

Scored in the 230s for both and added both to my developer profile.

#But...

Only technical problem I had was that I inadvertently double-clicked at one point and got a question wrong before I'd even read it. Might want to enforce a bit of input delay! The same kind of "prevent clicks" like during the review queues, just to make sure people are actually reading the question. I'm not sure I'd have gotten the question right even if I'd been able to read it, but it was a problem that I didn't get the opportunity.

I'm considering taking some others, but I know I'm significantly less skilled in the other skill paths that are currently available. e.g. I could take one of the Photoshop assessments but I actually don't use Photoshop proper, so I'm sure there'd be a question where my response would be "Heck if I know, but I know how to do this in GIMP!" and I'm concerned that a lower score displayed on my developer story would actually hurt me more than help.

That is, I don't know if these are going to be viewed as "icing" or "cake." Clearly the intent is for the scoring to be supplementary, but I'm worried that hiring managers are going to boil a profile down into a handful of numbers and say "this guy scored low on some of his skills and displayed them? Skip!" instead of "this guy is an expert in what we need, and is well rounded with a few other skills. Hired!"