Originally posted by The Spartan
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Having experienced a poor developer making a mess does nothing to change that.
The point is that a 'developer in test' is a developer - with focus in test automation. If questions about polymorphism is good for a developer, then it's good for a developer in test too.
If the guy is self-taught and doesn't know what polymorphism is, then he is almost certainly not going to be a 'good' developer. Good (which is obviously a relative term) developers read and study outside of work - and it's literally impossible to do that without absorbing terms such as polymorphism, etc.
Like I said, developer in test is a developer who focuses on test automation - not a tester who knows enough coding to get by. Otherwise the title dev in test wouldn't exist, as automation tester would suffice.

really? This guy has virtually brought the company into the 21st century when it comes to automated testing, he knows more than a bit of automation that's for sure. The framework we've built here is very flexible and robust but then I suppose we only know a little bit about automation. Yet when they had a actual developer write a test suite that's when it ended up a tangled mess and that's what we had to sort out. It's not always about knowing the term for everything I think it's much more useful to be to apply it practically.
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