My experience is in corporate Financial Services Mainframe/C/VB Procedural design/programming and a smattering of analysis. That has served me well, but the bottom seems to have finally fallen out of the market.
So I'm building on my rudimentary C/VB Object Based knowledge by working through the Deitel C++/OOP book as a stepping stone to VS2008/C#/SQLServer2008.
I plan to use the .NET Express/Framework/SDK downloads with Troelsen's Pro C# & MS Programming SQL Server books to complete the job.
So, finally getting to the point
- any views on the path I'm following?
- any views on why C# / SQLServer Job adverts also frequently cite ASP, XML, a list of obscure software products and look for server/webserver admin skills as well?
Why would an employer want a jack of all trades rather than a highly skilled specialist who can craft robust, elegant, maintainable and re-usable code as part of a team?
So I'm building on my rudimentary C/VB Object Based knowledge by working through the Deitel C++/OOP book as a stepping stone to VS2008/C#/SQLServer2008.
I plan to use the .NET Express/Framework/SDK downloads with Troelsen's Pro C# & MS Programming SQL Server books to complete the job.
So, finally getting to the point
- any views on the path I'm following?
- any views on why C# / SQLServer Job adverts also frequently cite ASP, XML, a list of obscure software products and look for server/webserver admin skills as well?
Why would an employer want a jack of all trades rather than a highly skilled specialist who can craft robust, elegant, maintainable and re-usable code as part of a team?



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