First year CSE student here, is there any point in having shit like a networked tic-tac-toe game on your github or what projects should i have to get a job?
>woah bro sick tic tac toe game dude, when can you start?
>>54839290
>loook at my shitposting skiiiilllzzz instant 300k starting
Stupid fucking frogposter, commit suicide immediately.
If it was a normal tic-tac-toe game i would normally say no, but since it's networked and assuming you mean using C and their socket libraries, then yes it could be good for someone trying to get an internship.
>>54839352
>C
I already started writing it in Java with MVC design pattern, well might as well rewrite it in C later on.
>>54839290
>>54839318
Thank you for your intellectual project ideas
>>54839440
>Java
ehh, might be a little too generic considering tic-tac-toe is usually Java Freshman's first project.
>>54839501
too add
Good projects are:
Creating an irc client
Creating an irc bot
Creating a bash-like shell.
>>54839519
IRC client, for real? Takes literally an hour
>>54839457
Yeah, even a hello world in ten languages on your github looks good because it shows you're at least code monkey material.
>>54839537
If it's shit yes, but a tic tac toe game could literally take 15 minutes.
Whoever reviews your resume or github is going to be more impressed with a "Functional irc-client with a UI" than a "tic-tac-toe game".
>>54839200
Best plan is to show a wide variety of completed projects. It's a bit like your university degree, it does not really measure your intelligence, it displays that you can complete a task. Find something that interests you and submit code, or write a stupid iPhone app.
>>54839200
>networked tic-tac-toe game
xDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD