Feel free to tell about what your day looks like. I’m exploring different positions so it’d be very valuable to me. I’ve already done a few courses in C# and Python, they seem to be quite common. My goal here is to get to know this role better, for now I have limited information about it. Is it rather repetitive, or is there always something new to do? What part of it do you enjoy the most and the least? Is it true that many desktop apps are really webapps?

  • wifi enyabled cat@beehaw.org
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    5
    ·
    1 year ago

    May just be bias from my experience, but a lot of back end stuff is cloud now. I had to learn how to design, deploy, and maintain Azure resources. Programming is still in C#, but now I have to give extra considerations into the limitations and abilities of Azure Function Apps. To me, it’s like a puzzle. How can I design a system to best achieve what the company needs done? Do I use Cosmos DB, Storage Tables, SQL? Every step of the cloud infrastructure design is up to me.

    The last part of you post is pretty true though, lots of desktop apps now are just web wrappers. Stuff like Discord, Spotify, Etcher to name a few.

    • Krzak@vlemmy.netOP
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      1 year ago

      Just when I thought it couldn’t get any more complicated haha. I like the puzzle part though, I’m thinking in a similar way.

      • AggressivelyPassive@feddit.de
        link
        fedilink
        English
        arrow-up
        2
        ·
        1 year ago

        And it only gets more complicated.

        The entire IT world is just a huge ball of complexity. Partly because the actual (domain/business) problem is simply hard, sometimes because you have to deal with legacy systems, partly because you have to deal with difficult people.

        As developer (and especially backend) our job is to coax or coerce this bundle of sorrow to do what we want it to do and hide as much duct tape as possible. Frontend then has to make that crap presentable and usable.

        The reality is, 90% of my work is not writing code, but all the stuff around it. I spent several hours in meetings to coordinate, how to split a long string into three. I’m not exaggerating. But there’s just 5 different consumers of this data and three different sources and you have to find a way to make all eight parties happy.

        • stephenc@waveform.social
          link
          fedilink
          English
          arrow-up
          1
          ·
          1 year ago

          Sounds like my position. I maybe write code a more than 10% of the time; maybe close to 40% these days. But code is definitely the least interesting thing I do anyway; solving the puzzle is the fun part. Coding is just following the plan most of the time.