Communication Within Programming Teams?
aldheorte asks: "If you are a developer you have probably, over your time on various development projects, seen lots of projects with really awful code and some projects with really good code. You may also have observed that sometimes the projects with really awful code have a few excellent developers involved, while projects with only intermediate or mediocre developers are able to maintain a pretty good quality of code overall. The lucky few may have even seen that legendary situation of great developers and great code. I have always been mystified by this apparent discrepancy and I think a recent article on CSS development in a team environment may hit the nail on the head: 'The quality of code generated by a team rarely owes as much to the skill of the individual members as it does to the level of communication between them.' I am interested in the experience of others here on Slashdot. Have you observed this discrepancy between individual talent and a project's quality of code as well? How much of the success or failure of communication is based on the members of the team themselves as opposed to the management of the team, especially with respect to allowed time and deadlines?"
I also think people make a big scene to managers that the previous developer's code was bad simply to make themselves look good. The manager who usually doesn't code says to themselves "Well he must be a great coder if he thinks the previous developer didn't know what he/she was doing."
Another developer cliché is to complain about documentation. Doesn't matter if you write a war and peace size document to explian everything, the next developer is totally not going to read it. The next developer if he/she doesn't understand it simply says "This code is crap". This buys more time to become competent at programming changes and makes them look like a top coder to the credulous manager.
Where in the hell did you learn to write, anyway? How on earth do you expect someone to understand that incomprehensible mess? Your writing style is absolutely atrocious. Are you a native English speaker? I've met two-year-olds with better communication skills. The simple fact that you started a sentence with "Doesn't matter" instead of "It doesn't matter" means that your entire comment is garbage and should be rewritten. Oh, and it's explain, for God's sake. I won't even bother to comment on the lack of commas.