Your view on profession is limited and shortsighted. Now with the global scope of Internet programming and communication technology changing as fast as it is, there could never be any licensing authority to set in judgement of this profession -- let alone to be sanctioned by the global community.

I'm not so sure. Do you think communications technology is changing faster that tax laws?

The point being that the term "profession" has outgrown its definition.

Would you, and the general public, not consider Medical Doctors, Dentists, CPA, Certified Architect, and Lawyers professionals? As you correctly point out the definition of a professions is a moving target
varying by profession.

The real problem, as I see it, is that programming is not about syntax. Someone pointed out that they would do poorly on a programming test because they don't memorize what is available in a manual. Creative problem solving, system conceptualization and programmatic insight are the characteristics separating the
great programmers for the good programmers.

When I was in college I took a non-computer course called Creative Problem Solving. It had more
influence on my programming, by far, than any computer course I took.

As far as being an elitist or pragmatist, I really don't think your words reflect a pragmatistic view.

        I'll have to work on that :-)

BTW, how does one change the subject when a response clearly doesn't match the current
subject. I arbitrarily did that one time and was corrected.


Urb

Dr. Urban A. LeJeune, President
E-Government.com
609-294-0320  800-204-9545
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
E-Government.com lowers you costs while increasing your expectations.


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