| bio | website | scottwylie.com |
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| location | San Francisco, CA | |
| age | 43 | |
| visits | member for | 1 year, 7 months |
| seen | Apr 17 at 3:24 | |
| stats | profile views | 12 |
I have been programming since the days of Commodore 64 and TRS-80. Today I specialize in Winforms, C# and Application Lifecycle Management.
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Mar 22 |
awarded | Informed |
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Feb 26 |
awarded | Constituent |
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Feb 19 |
awarded | Caucus |
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Oct 13 |
awarded | Yearling |
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Sep 30 |
awarded | Booster |
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Aug 12 |
awarded | Revival |
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Apr 13 |
awarded | Notable Question |
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Apr 4 |
awarded | Enthusiast |
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Nov 1 |
answered | Who owns the code I wrote, what rights do I have with respect to my employer |
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Nov 1 |
comment |
How best to prevent having to revisit a change after check in Depends on the size of the code, the number of unit tests you have, did or can you run static analysis on the code, the complexity of the code, if you have used a new API that you are not familiar with and how good your requirements are. |
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Oct 31 |
revised |
How to spend less time on debugging? added 9 characters in body |
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Oct 31 |
answered | How to spend less time on debugging? |
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Oct 25 |
comment |
How can I start testing in a testing anticulture? If you don't have source control in your antitesting culture, I would try to do that first (or as well) as that will solve lots of other problems that I am sure your team is having. Then it lays the foundation for what you want to do for testing. |
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Oct 24 |
awarded | Critic |
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Oct 24 |
awarded | Editor |
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Oct 24 |
revised |
In what situations is it a bad idea to use open source code for a corporate project? added 11 characters in body |
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Oct 24 |
answered | In what situations is it a bad idea to use open source code for a corporate project? |
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Oct 21 |
awarded | Announcer |
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Oct 21 |
awarded | Popular Question |
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Oct 21 |
awarded | Good Question |