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Full Discussion: Who would you employ?
The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Who would you employ? Post 302953225 by rbatte1 on Wednesday 26th of August 2015 05:20:32 AM
Old 08-26-2015
I would employ someone from this board, preferably one with the handle wisecracker That candidate seems a perfect employee Smilie

But ignoring the blatant sycophancy and assuming that you wish to escape, I would humbly suggest you seek one who is:-
  • generally bright rather than qualified
  • open to ideas
  • old enough not to be GUI-only
  • doesn't have a fancy looking C.V., but has content over visuals
  • who can read manuals well
  • is not scared by problems and will ask for help

In larger companies, a good Personnel or H.R. department may well have puzzles that stretch the mind and allows you to observe the process. That may give you an insight too. Additionally, try to set some puzzles of your own, e.g. try to get them to describe the difference between truncate table table_name ; and delete from table_name ;


It might sound like passing the responsibility, but I have had too much experience of very qualified people who don't have a clue, and when you consider the cheating that is common in some places where some people may have obtained qualifications, they become worth even less, which I'm sure for some is a grave injustice.



Robin
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STAG-DB(1p)						User Contributed Perl Documentation					       STAG-DB(1p)

NAME
stag-db - persistent storage and retrieval for stag data (xml, sxpr, itext) SYNOPSIS
stag-db -r person -k social_security_no -i ./person-idx myrecords.xml stag-db -i ./person-idx -q 999-9999-9999 -q 888-8888-8888 DESCRIPTION
Builds a simple file-based database for persistent storage and retrieval of nodes from a stag compatible document. Imagine you have a very large file of data, in a stag compatible format such as XML. You want to index all the elements of type person; each person can be uniquely identified by social_security_no, which is a direct subnode of person The first thing to do is to build an index file, which will be stored in your current directory: stag-db -r person -k social_security_no -i ./person-idx myrecords.xml You can then use the index "person-idx" to retrieve person nodes by their social security number stag-db -i ./person-idx -q 999-9999-9999 > some-person.xml You can export using different stag formats stag-db -i ./person-idx -q 999-9999-9999 -w sxpr > some-person.xml You can retrieve multiple nodes (although these need to be rooted to make a valid file) stag-db -i ./person-idx -q 999-9999-9999 -q 888-8888-8888 -top personset Or you can use a list of IDs from a file (newline delimited) stag-db -i ./person-idx -qf my_ss_nmbrs.txt -top personset ARGUMENTS -i INDEXFILE This file will be used as the persistent index for storage/retrieval -r RELATION-NAME This is the name of the stag node (XML element) that will be stored in the index; for example, with the XML below you may want to use the node name person and the unique key id <person_set> <person> <id>...</id> </person> <person> <id>...</id> </person> ... </person_set> This flag should only be used when you want to store data -k UNIQUE-KEY This node will be used as the unique/primary key for the data This node should be nested directly below the node that is being stored in the index - if it is more that one below, specify a path This flag should only be used when you want to store data -u UNIQUE-KEY Synonym for -k -p PARSER This can be the name of a stag supported format (xml, sxpr, itext) - XML is assumed by default It can also be a module name - this module is used to parse the input file into a stag stream; see Data::Stag::BaseGenerator for details on writing your own parsers/event generators This flag should only be used when you want to store data -q QUERY-ID Fetches the relation/node with unique key value equal to query-id Multiple arguments can be passed by specifying -q multple times This flag should only be used when you want to query data -top NODE-NAME If this is specified in conjunction with -q or -qf then all the query result nodes will be nested inside a node with this name (ie this provides a root for the resulting document tree) -qf QUERY-FILE This is a file of newline-seperated IDs; this is useful for querying the index in batch -keys This will write a list of all primary keys in the index -w WRITER This format will be used to write the data; can be any stag format (xml, sxpr, itext) - default XML. Can also be a module that catches the incoming stag event stream and does something with it (for example, this could be a module you write yourself that transforms the stag events into HTML) SEE ALSO
Data::Stag For more complex stag to database mapping, see DBIx::DBStag and the scripts stag-storenode selectall_xml perl v5.10.0 2008-12-23 STAG-DB(1p)
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