> Well, I don't really agree that certification requires you to know > *all* about a language - that isn't feasible in a 'short' test like a > certification.
It depends on what your aim is...in studying for the test/gain knowledge. Just pass the exam? Or Be very confident.. that you can deal with any Question.. I read 4 books cover to cover(inclusive advanced topics). Tried every single function and cf tag...read all documentation. Isnt this good enough to understand CF well? Of course.. the experience counts too. Atleast i am confident to try crack and scale any given problem... Joe > -----Original Message----- > From: Sean A Corfield [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] > Sent: Tuesday, January 07, 2003 9:54 PM > To: CF-Talk > Subject: Re: certification experiences/plans? > > > On Tuesday, Jan 7, 2003, at 05:30 US/Pacific, Joe Eugene wrote: > > A Certification Requires you to KNOW all Areas/Aspects of the > > development language. > > Certifcation Requires you to be able to Understand and be able to > > implement all aspects of the language. > > I disagree. An exam is never a real test of development skills - I've > seen terrible code from people with all sorts of advanced > certifications. > Certifications are valid and useful in many ways - but do not support > your claims, IMO. > > Sean A Corfield -- http://www.corfield.org/blog/ > > "If you're not annoying somebody, you're not really alive." > -- Margaret Atwood > > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~| Archives: http://www.houseoffusion.com/cf_lists/index.cfm?forumid=4 Subscription: http://www.houseoffusion.com/cf_lists/index.cfm?method=subscribe&forumid=4 FAQ: http://www.thenetprofits.co.uk/coldfusion/faq This list and all House of Fusion resources hosted by CFHosting.com. The place for dependable ColdFusion Hosting. Unsubscribe: http://www.houseoffusion.com/cf_lists/unsubscribe.cfm?user=89.70.4

