Checked their LinkedIn and the employees who work there. The founder is non-technical and there are two developers: one who is a "back-end intern" and the other is a front-end developer (both are fresh from bootcamps).
For context, I'm in university, but during one of my internships, a lot of the older developers always seemed to use awk/sed in really powerful ways. At the same time, I noticed a lot of the younger developers hardly used it.
I'm not sure if it's a generational thing, but I thought that was interesting.
Anyways, are there any good resources to learn awk/sed effectively?
...sure, but I would rather have a Twitter feed with daily programming tips and anecdotes from industry experts, rather than snarky replies to people with differing political opinions. Thanks for the comment though.
That's a pretty useless answer. It's easy to use C++, but in a non-idiomatic or C-style way. I think the OP is aware of this problem and is looking for concrete examples of modern C++.
Yeah, still in school (3rd year). I have intern experience, but it seems like these type of positions are way too advanced for me at the moment. Just unsure how to progress...
Unrelated: as a CS undergrad, I read this article and was immediately inspired. This is definitely the type of work I want to be doing when I graduate (infrastructure engineering). But my next thought was: where do I start?!
I certainly agree. However, if OP is simply referring to learning the typical algorithms presented in an undergraduate CS course, then linear algebra isn't a strict prerequisite.
Lmao.