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Andreas Jakof
Andreas Jakof

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Ask questions and tell us your passion

This week, we have welcomed a new trainee in our team. He is still pretty green, but he had the right attitude to the job.

He escaped from Syria in 2015, coming to Germany with nothing. He then spent multiple months in a camp and after that he first started his education.

He is into coding for about 6 months now, starting with HTML and some very basic JS. For 2 months he started looking into C# (our „team“ language of choice).

So we did except a little but not too much. And we were about right. What I did not expect, because of other experience, was his attitude towards coding. Usually trainees came to it, because „there is good money in it and they don’t get dirty“. But he just likes to code.

I was talking to him and he was an artist in Syria and to him, coding is comparable to that. I am by far no artist, but I can relate to his argument. An argument I already read: It’s the process of creation.

Another aspect of his attitude: He comes and asks questions. And not just how to solve this or that, but how this works and why this behaves like that.
He is also proactive: He finished his job (a small API, to calculate Exchange Values between currencies) and right after it, he came to me and told me, that he would like to learn SQL. He saw, that we are using it quite a bit in our daily work and he wants to learn!

I was very impressed and I wanted to share that with you.

Don’t be afraid to ask and if you want to learn something, tell your team or boss. If it has the least value, you will most likely get the chance!

I told him, to pick up a tutorial, gave him some links, where he could read more and we expanded his Currency Exchange API to a banking Platform (from the view of a Bank) so there will be accounts, account owners and transactions. No security, though, that would add too much complexity for now.

Top comments (4)

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andreasjakof profile image
Andreas Jakof

I promised an update.

His time with us is (sadly) over and he is no longer part of our team, but still in the company.
He was doing a chess game, when I last had contact to him, learning OOP. And his attitude has not changed !

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exadra37 profile image
Paulo Renato

Thanks for sharing this amazing story.

A developer with passion for coding goes a long way for one that only codes because its a profession he likes.

I know, because I have the passion and no computer science degree.

I also like to do a lot of questions, even now that I am not a Junior.

Keep us up to date with his progress.

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andreasjakof profile image
Andreas Jakof

I‘d love and hopefully I get the chance to do.
He is a trainee and currently for about 6 months part of our team. During his training years, he will go around many teams, to take a peek into the work of multiple groups.

There will be at least one more post about him, when he has to leave, recapitulating his progress.
Maybe he will be a permanent part of the team later after his apprenticeship.

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thealiilman profile image
Ali Ilman

Thank you for sharing the story Andreas! 😊
Talent can only carry one so far, passion of the craft goes a long, long way.

The more I write code, the more I feel it is comparable to art (and poetry!).

As Paulo have said, please keep us up to date with his progress. 🤓