On Wednesday, August 28, 2002, at 11:06 , S. Isaac Dealey wrote:
> I've heard people use the difference to indicate that a "developer" does
> planning and architectural design work whereas a "programmer" just does
> programming and makes sure an application achieves the features requested 
> in
> the functional specification, without regard to wholistic questions about
> what the application is for or who will use it. Which is usually what I
> intend to imply when I tell people I'm a developer (that is, that I do 
> more
> than just programming).

That's the 'distinction' I'm most familiar with over the last twenty years.
.

> I've also seen or heard people make the distinction that a "programmer" is
> someone who works with traditional ( usually compiled ) languages like C/
> C++
> and Java whereas a "developer" just "toys with web scripts and other
> interpreted stuff"... This isn't a distinction I much care for, because 
> imho
> it encourages a gratuitous continued antagonism between the "old-school" 
> and
> the new, but I've heard it used.

I agree with you Isaac (and was a little surprised to hear MD say he'd 
heard this distinction too - glad he also doesn't like it!).

Sean A Corfield -- http://www.corfield.org/blog/

"If you're not annoying somebody, you're not really alive."
-- Margaret Atwood

______________________________________________________________________
This list and all House of Fusion resources hosted by CFHosting.com. The place for 
dependable ColdFusion Hosting.
FAQ: http://www.thenetprofits.co.uk/coldfusion/faq
Archives: http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/
Unsubscribe: http://www.houseoffusion.com/index.cfm?sidebar=lists

Reply via email to