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.
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