I really agree with you that reading the requirements is very important. what I feel, sometimes, is that, even if I read the requirements, my idea of the things to do is different from the costumer one... probably the best way is to make questions, give feedbacks and prepare a showcase/mock up/demo.
about the techs, I think the best way is to try different programming languages to understand their strengths and weaks, maybe developing simple apps.
thanks for sharing your thoughts, I'm in the same situation and you make me think deeper on it.
Learning other languages strengths and weaknesses would be beneficial for sure! Our shop however is really just strictly C# .NET focused so our ability to branch out and use other stacks is a bit limited :P
Asking more questions of the client would have really helped me through this project for sure and I'm hoping to take what Ive learned from this and apply it to projects in the future.
hi Damien,
I really agree with you that reading the requirements is very important. what I feel, sometimes, is that, even if I read the requirements, my idea of the things to do is different from the costumer one... probably the best way is to make questions, give feedbacks and prepare a showcase/mock up/demo.
about the techs, I think the best way is to try different programming languages to understand their strengths and weaks, maybe developing simple apps.
thanks for sharing your thoughts, I'm in the same situation and you make me think deeper on it.
cheers!
Emanuele
Hey Emanuele, thanks for reading!
Learning other languages strengths and weaknesses would be beneficial for sure! Our shop however is really just strictly C# .NET focused so our ability to branch out and use other stacks is a bit limited :P
Asking more questions of the client would have really helped me through this project for sure and I'm hoping to take what Ive learned from this and apply it to projects in the future.
keep up the good job! :)
thanks for sharing