> You can learn a lot about a developer by asking "What do you think about Mongo, JavaScript, or PHP", and if their response isn't a shrug, they're probably more concerned with what editor is correct than if the product they're building is useful. It's an exceptional filter to reject zealots and find pragmatists.
Sure, if they’re being rude about it. A developer saying that it will not fit the use case or talking about spending a month of their time fixing a production issue caused by MongoDB will definitely not get a “no” from me. I’m not hiring subservient people I’m hiring people who can think for themselves and choose the right tool for the job, which Mongo rarely is.
Yes, I couldn't agree more. Didn't mean people can't have opinions of course - just that they shouldn't be scoffing/laughing at tools - to me its a particularly red flag. Not wanting to use a particular tool is totally fine!
Tools are just tools. Imagine scoffing at someone using a hammer, when in your less experienced opinion, they should be using NewHammer3.1.
Tools are means to an end. I much prefer working with people who care about the product and the business than what tools they used to build said product/business. I'm looking for "hey, you could save a lot of time by using tool Y", rather than "You people are idiots for even considering tool Z".
No. I can certainly imagine anyone scoffing at someone using a hammer when they are trying to dig a hole in the ground screaming "Tools are just tools!"
So yes, writing a website with assembler raises eyebrows and it is quite OK to ridicule bad languages such as PHP.
Sure, if they’re being rude about it. A developer saying that it will not fit the use case or talking about spending a month of their time fixing a production issue caused by MongoDB will definitely not get a “no” from me. I’m not hiring subservient people I’m hiring people who can think for themselves and choose the right tool for the job, which Mongo rarely is.