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| IF men & women write code at the same rate.... Discuss. -----Original Message----- From: info-ingres-bounces-at-kettleriverconsulting.com [mailto:info-ingres-bounces-at-kettleriverconsulting.com] On Behalf Of Seth Grimes Sent: 24 June 2008 14:00 To: info-ingres-at-kettleriverconsulting.com Subject: Re: [Info-Ingres] Emma McGrattan : Men Write Code from Mars, Women Write More Helpful Code from Venus One the one hand, "McGrattan boasts that 70% to 80% of the time, she can look at a chunk of computer code and tell if it was written by a man or a woman." On the other hand, "only about 20% of the engineers are women, McGrattan says. (Most of them are in jobs involving quality assurance or adapting the product to a new locale, she says, and not the "heavy lifting" of writing code.)" If you accept McGrattan's figures, well over 80% of programmers are men. So here's what you can do: Look at a chunk of computer code, guess that it was written by a man, and OVER 80% of the time you'll be correct, and you'll handily beat McGrattan to boot. Seth zhenchen17 wrote: > A lot of Chinese Websites translate this article to open an arguement. > What does everyone here think about? > ************************************************** ********************** ************************************************** **** > Men Write Code from Mars, Women Write More Helpful Code from Venus > We all know men hate to ask for directions. Apparently they loathe > putting directions in computer code, too. > > > > > She would have been one heck of a coder > Emma McGrattan, the senior vice-president of engineering for computer- > database company Ingres-and one of Silicon Valley's highest-ranking > female programmers-insists that men and women write code differently. > Women are more touchy-feely and considerate of those who will use the > code later, she says. They'll intersperse their code-those strings of > instructions that result in nifty applications and programs-with > helpful comments and directions, explaining why they wrote the lines > the way they did and exactly how they did it. > > The code becomes a type of "roadmap" for others who might want to > alter it or add to it later, says McGrattan, a native of Ireland who > has been with Ingres since 1992. > > Men, on the other hand, have no such pretenses. Often, "they try to > show how clever they are by writing very cryptic code," she tells the > Business Technology Blog. "They try to obfuscate things in the code," > and don't leave clear directions for people using it later. McGrattan > boasts that 70% to 80% of the time, she can look at a chunk of > computer code and tell if it was written by a man or a woman. > > In an effort to make Ingres's computer code more user-friendly and > gender-neutral, McGrattan helped institute new coding standards at the > company. They require programmers to include a detailed set of > comments before each block of code explaining what the piece of code > does and why; developers also must supply a detailed history of any > changes they have made to the code. The rules apply to both Ingres > employees and members of the open-source community who contribute code > to Ingres's products. > > There's a big need to fix testosterone-fueled code at Ingres because > only about 20% of the engineers are women, McGrattan says. (Most of > them are in jobs involving quality assurance or adapting the product > to a new locale, she says, and not the "heavy lifting" of writing > code.) She's on a mission to get more women interested in computer- > programming careers. But "it's proving very challenging," she says. > _______________________________________________ Info-Ingres mailing list Info-Ingres-at-kettleriverconsulting.com http://www.kettleriverconsulting.com...fo/info-ingres __________________________________________________ ___________________ This e-mail has been scanned for viruses by Verizon Business Internet Managed Scanning Services - powered by MessageLabs. For further information visit http://www.verizonbusiness.com/uk |
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