| ▲ | palata 4 days ago | |||||||
I don't mind the celebration and ceremony as long as they don't bother me personally. I wouldn't fight against the existance of a PatternConf, I just wouldn't go :-). I've had some debates with junior devs who really wanted to enforce their newly-learned patterns, and my experience there is that passed a certain point, there is no convincing anymore: if they really insist about overengineering something with their newly-learned concept and the hierarchy doesn't allow me to prevent them from doing it, anyway they will do it. So instead of fighting I just let them, and if it turns out to be a waste of time in the end... well that's not my problem: I was not in a position to prevent it in the first place. It's not only patterns though: some juniors have a way to try to use every exciting framework or library or tool they just discovered. | ||||||||
| ▲ | Yokohiii 3 days ago | parent [-] | |||||||
The silly thing is that I've been the same when I started. A high energy kid playing around and celebrating everything fresh and new, with a big ego. Probably a bad habit trying to stop them, they need to learn walking before they can sprint. The question is always how to put limits on them? I say it's overengineered, they say it's modern code and I am old. So what do you do if they send you a PR that is just plain wrong? I mean it seems like you delay the conflict from upfront design/planning to pull requests. | ||||||||
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