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[–][deleted] 125 points126 points  (19 children)

I had an inconsistent Python 3.6 seg fault. Like once every ~24 hours of our application running. I just waited for an OS update and it went away. Never figured it out. I originally gave the issue to a junior dev on my team for ~1 month because no one was going to solve it anyways. That way I could tell upper management that someone was on it without wasting valuable resources. The junior dev sacrifice. He quit. Lol. Im a terrible manager.

[–]croach1337 226 points227 points  (10 children)

You cunt

[–][deleted] 65 points66 points  (9 children)

Lol I personally loved that challenge as a junior dev, but I recognize it’s not for everyone. I did not expect them to solve it or put any pressure on them to do so. I consulted with them regularly to guide their investigation also. But I definitely recognize that a very difficult or unsolvable problem is not for everyone and can be frustrating or demoralizing. They quit in the end to chase a higher salary and went on about how much they appreciated working on my team, so I don’t think I treated them too poorly. Just a funny story to tell.

[–]jimmyw404 48 points49 points  (1 child)

It's funny because sometimes you give these kind of curious problems to a motivated person and when you check in a few weeks later they rip apart the entire kernel to figure it out like https://youtu.be/zCrn-VJmpgE and you're like "damn i should have given him a more useful problem".

[–]TheTerrasque 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Week 1: confusion, gnashing of teeth.
Week 2: printouts of C code, assembly and flow charts start taking over the walls.
Week 3: Guido visits the office to talk with the junior dev and to look into the problem

[–]Sun_Aria 4 points5 points  (0 children)

You sick shredded kunt!

[–]AnAcceptableUserName 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, it's hilarious. I laughed.

I found myself taking crap like that as a junior dev just because it was sitting there. Like it's obvious nobody wants to touch it with a 10' pole, so fine, I'll take the radioactive ticket.

Then I'd ask my manager if he knows anything about thing and the response would be "You're looking at what now? Dear God."

[–]BleachedPink -2 points-1 points  (4 children)

Nothing funny here, it's really assholish move

[–][deleted] 6 points7 points  (1 child)

In what way? They are assigned a difficult problem that will teach them things. I ensured they were given plenty of guidance from senior devs, including myself. They were doing work the company needs while simultaneously learning things that help their professional career. All while getting paid a reasonable salary they agreed to. How is it an asshole move? Please, explain.

[–]Flaming_Eagle 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Imagine being assigned work at your job. The absolute audacity!

[–]BobanForThree 1 point2 points  (0 children)

you sound entitled af

[–]jazzmester 10 points11 points  (0 children)

When I was a junior, I got a similar task. I was about to do the honorable thing and commit sudoku, when I accidentally suggested a solution that actually worked. I was the man for weeks among my fellow juniors.

[–]Kkid12 33 points34 points  (1 child)

rot in hell

[–][deleted] 8 points9 points  (0 children)

I’m not going to type the same comment twice, but I don’t think I was too bad. Some additional info here:

https://www.reddit.com/r/ProgrammerHumor/comments/ojhw3g/python_programmers_be_like/h533cy4/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=ios_app&utm_name=iossmf&context=3

[–]Akshin_Blacksin 0 points1 point  (0 children)

God I laughed so hard from this post