1. Euphoria Accreditation?
- Posted by mick15_hello at yahoo.com Feb 08, 2002
- 482 views
--0-672839807-1013180065=:6877 TOTUS TUUS G'day, Im an Australian teenager who picked up Euphoria about a year ago. I've found it very good. I feel confident making basic programs and have read through as many tutorials as possible. However, I cannot see how this can be made to count on a resume. Knowing how to program in Euphoria is great, but seems a bit futile unless I can get employed at it. What can I do to get some recognition, like some sort of accreditation? Thanks a lot, Michael. --------------------------------- Do You Yahoo!? Send FREE Valentine eCards with Yahoo! Greetings! --0-672839807-1013180065=:6877 <P> TOTUS TUUS</P> <P>G'day, Im an Australian teenager who picked up Euphoria about a year ago. I've found it very good. I feel confident making basic programs and have read through as many tutorials as possible. However, I cannot see how this can be made to count on a resume. Knowing how to program in Euphoria is great, but seems a bit futile unless I can get employed at it. What can I do to get some recognition, like some sort of accreditation?</P> <P>Thanks a lot,<BR>Michael.</P><p><br><hr size=1><b>Do You Yahoo!?</b><br> Send FREE Valentine eCards with <a href="http://rd.yahoo.com/mail_us/tag/?http://greetings.yahoo.com">Yahoo! Greetings!</a> --0-672839807-1013180065=:6877--
2. Re: Euphoria Accreditation?
- Posted by vern at lvp.eastlink.ca Feb 08, 2002
- 485 views
This is a multi-part message in MIME format. ------=_NextPart_000_003B_01C1B0A7.F2808320 charset="iso-8859-1" Perhaps any potential employer wil be sufficiently impressed at your ability to learn and work on your own and that logical and technical reasons do not intimidate you :) ----- Original Message ----- From: mick15_hello at yahoo.com To: EUforum Sent: Friday, February 08, 2002 10:54 AM Subject: Euphoria Accreditation? TOTUS TUUS G'day, Im an Australian teenager who picked up Euphoria about a year ago. I've found it very good. I feel confident making basic programs and have read through as many tutorials as possible. However, I cannot see how this can be made to count on a resume. Knowing how to program in Euphoria is great, but seems a bit futile unless I can get employed at it. What can I do to get some recognition, like some sort of accreditation? Thanks a lot, Michael. ------=_NextPart_000_003B_01C1B0A7.F2808320 Content-Type: text/html; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN"> <HTML><HEAD> <META http-equiv=Content-Type content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1"> <META content="MSHTML 6.00.2712.300" name=GENERATOR> <STYLE></STYLE> </HEAD> <BODY bgColor=#ffffff> <DIV><FONT face=Arial size=2>Perhaps any potential employer wil be sufficiently impressed at your ability to learn and work on your own and that logical and technical reasons do not intimidate you :)</FONT></DIV> <BLOCKQUOTE style="PADDING-RIGHT: 0px; PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; BORDER-LEFT: #000000 2px solid; MARGIN-RIGHT: 0px"> <DIV style="FONT: 10pt arial">----- Original Message ----- </DIV> <DIV style="BACKGROUND: #e4e4e4; FONT: 10pt arial; font-color: black"><B>From:</B> <A title=mick15_hello at yahoo.com href="mailto:mick15_hello at yahoo.com">mick15_hello at yahoo.com</A> </DIV> <DIV style="FONT: 10pt arial"><B>To:</B> <A title=EUforum at topica.com href="mailto:EUforum at topica.com">EUforum</A> </DIV> <DIV style="FONT: 10pt arial"><B>Sent:</B> Friday, February 08, 2002 10:54 AM</DIV> <DIV style="FONT: 10pt arial"><B>Subject:</B> Euphoria Accreditation?</DIV> <DIV><BR></DIV> <P> TOTUS TUUS</P> <P>G'day, Im an Australian teenager who picked up Euphoria about a year ago. I've found it very good. I feel confident making basic programs and have read through as many tutorials as possible. However, I cannot see how this can be made to count on a resume. Knowing how to program in Euphoria is great, but seems a bit futile unless I can get employed at it. What can I do to get some recognition, like some sort of accreditation?</P> <P>Thanks a lot,<BR>Michael.</P> <P><BR> <HR SIZE=1> <B>Do You Yahoo!?</B><BR>Send FREE Valentine eCards with <A href="http://rd.yahoo.com/mail_us/tag/?http://greetings.yahoo.com">Yahoo! ------=_NextPart_000_003B_01C1B0A7.F2808320--
3. Re: Euphoria Accreditation?
- Posted by Irv Mullins <irvm at ellijay.com> Feb 08, 2002
- 470 views
On Friday 08 February 2002 09:54 am, mick15_hello at yahoo.com wrote: > G'day, Im an Australian teenager who picked up Euphoria about a year ago. > I've found it very good. I feel confident making basic programs and have > read through as many tutorials as possible. However, I cannot see how this > can be made to count on a resume. Knowing how to program in Euphoria is > great, but seems a bit futile unless I can get employed at it. What can I > do to get some recognition, like some sort of accreditation? Euphoria is useless on a resume'. It's a good way to get into programming, however, because you can actually write fairly useful programs with it, and go on to learn three or four other languages, which WILL go on your resume'. Also, if you happen to write something useful in Euphoria, and people are really impressed with it, why should you tell them what language you used? My answer would be: "I always choose the most appropriate tool for the job", which is kinder than saying "you wouldn't have a clue if I told you" - which is most often the case. You should be aware of two things: 1 Whatever language you learn now will most likely be out of style in three or four years. 2. Having the ability to (quickly) learn something new is more valuable than knowing the old (out of style) stuff backwards and forwards - assuming you can't do both. Accreditation for programmers is like accreditation for musicians. I can read music, and know where all the keys are on a piano - so I could pass the test, right? For some reason, however, nobody wants to hear me play. Regards, Irv
4. Re: Euphoria Accreditation?
- Posted by Wolf <wolfritz at KING.IGS.NET> Feb 08, 2002
- 482 views
This is a multi-part message in MIME format. ------=_NextPart_000_0009_01C1B0A5.46129580 charset="iso-8859-1" Quite simple, really ! Just write a " WOW, this is a really unique and useful... " application in Euphoria that everyone will want to BUY and use ! ... and, there's your accreditation. ------=_NextPart_000_0009_01C1B0A5.46129580 charset="iso-8859-1" <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN"> <HTML><HEAD> <META content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1" http-equiv=Content-Type> <META content="MSHTML 5.00.3314.2100" name=GENERATOR> <STYLE></STYLE> </HEAD> <BODY bgColor=#ffffff> <DIV><FONT size=2>Quite simple, really !</FONT></DIV> <DIV><FONT size=2>Just write a " WOW, this is a really unique and useful... " application in Euphoria that everyone will want to BUY and use !</FONT></DIV> <DIV><FONT size=2>... and, there's your accreditation. </FONT></DIV> ------=_NextPart_000_0009_01C1B0A5.46129580--
5. Re: Euphoria Accreditation?
- Posted by Euler German <efgerman at myrealbox.com> Feb 08, 2002
- 468 views
Hi Irv, On 8 Feb 2002, at 13:15, Irv Mullins wrote: -<snip>- > 1 Whatever language you learn now will most likely be out of style in three or > four years. 2. Having the ability to (quickly) learn something new is more -<snip>- Well, I disagree. I can show you a handful of programming languages that still fully operational and 'in style' these days, but I'll tell you just one: COBOL! My first language and one that I particularly hate. ;) Cheers, -- Euler
6. Re: Euphoria Accreditation?
- Posted by Euler German <efgerman at myrealbox.com> Feb 08, 2002
- 467 views
<FontFamily><param>Times New Roman</param><bigger>Hi Mick, I liked your 'totus tuus'. It shows faith and belief. Not in Euphoria or any other programming language, but in your own skills. To handle anything you get, using whatever you have in hands, that's all accreditation you need. ;) Cheers! -- Euler On 8 Feb 2002, at 6:54, mick15_hello at yahoo.com wrote: TOTUS TUUS G'day, Im an Australian teenager who picked up Euphoria about a year ago. I've found it very good. I feel confident making basic programs and have read through as many tutorials as possible. However, I cannot see how this can be made to count on a resume. Knowing how to program in Euphoria is great, but seems a bit futile unless I can get employed at it. What can I do to get some recognition, like some sort of accreditation? Thanks a lot, Michael. <bold>Do You Yahoo!?</bold> Send FREE Valentine eCards with <underline><color><param>0000,0000,FF00</param>Yahoo! Greetings!
7. Re: Euphoria Accreditation?
- Posted by Irv Mullins <irvm at ellijay.com> Feb 09, 2002
- 467 views
On Friday 08 February 2002 09:53 pm, Euler German wrote: > Well, I disagree. I can show you a handful of programming languages that > still fully operational and 'in style' these days, but I'll tell you just > one: COBOL! My first language and one that I particularly hate. ;) There'll always be a need for people to support legacy applications, but job postings you see now talk about xml, php, Java, ASP, and VB. As an example, see the survey here: http://www.computerworld.com/cwi/story/0,1199,NAV47_STO54574,00.html For example: 10% of the companies surveyed planned to hire COBOL programmers in 2002, while 36% planned to hire Java programmers. I've seen a good bit of discussion lately that indicates that Java is losing its appeal, as well. Who knows whats next? Regards, Irv