I have an interview tomorrow for a company using
Spring Boot, JPA/Hibernate, Spring RestController, Jquery, angularJS, Apache Tomcat, and JFPL.
I've never used JFPL before / don't know anything about it.
I was wondering if you guys could help me prepare for the interview? Is there anything about these techs I should know? Which tech does what, etc.
If you recently graduated, or are finishing up at a college/university that has a license for Lynda.com, or if you just have your own account, I would recommend using that site. It has a lot of helpful tutorials and videos about a lot of different subjects. I just found a video about creating a RESTful Spring Boot microservice in JPA. As for the other subjects I'm sure that you could find videos on those too.
If you've got this far they probably just want you to know the JS side with some basic java. It sounds like they're stuck behind Java. You'll just need to learn the Spring and Hibernate stuff on the job.
Honestly, I'd fucking run. Java is incidental complexity. All of it.
>>58860773
I know Spring and Hibernate already, I'm not a fan of Java, but yeah, the Job is going to be using a lot of Java and JS,
>>58860738
no college degree, one isn't needed to be a professional programmer.
>>58860840
Woah, woah, I know, dude. I was just pointing out something you could use that a good many colleges get a license for. I know you can be a programmer without a degree.
The advice still stands. Lynda.com is a good learning tool. Definitely worth getting an account.
>>58860910
Ok, thanks, I'm checking it out now.
>>58860910
>Woah, woah, I know, dude. I was just pointing out something you could use that a good many colleges get a license for. I know you can be a programmer without a degree.
You fuckers always subconsciously subtly insult programmers without degrees and yet you back down like the low test beta bitch you are when you are called out.
>>58860971
What the fuck? I was never insulting this guy. If I was going to insult him I wouldn't have replied with advice at all. I would just let OP flop in front of whatever company they're interviewing with. That would be my insult.
Some of the best programmers I know are ones who have been programming since high school. Some have a drive and passion for programming from early on and learn a lot just by learning stuff on the Internet. It was a joke between my friends and I that we could learn everything we're learning in our classes just by googling it.
Also, "subconsciously subtly." Nice wording. THAT'S me being a pretentious fuck.