程序员能力矩阵

Programmer Competency Matrix

Note that the knowledge for each level is cumulative; being at level n implies that you also know everything from the levels lower than n.
Computer Science
 2n (Level 0)n2 (Level 1)n (Level 2)log(n) (Level 3)Comments
data structuresDoesn't know the difference between Array and LinkedList Able to explain and use Arrays, LinkedLists, Dictionaries etc in practical programming tasks Knows space and time tradeoffs of the basic data structures, Arrays vs LinkedLists, Able to explain how hashtables can be implemented and can handle collisions, Priority queues and ways to implement them etc. Knowledge of advanced data structures like B-trees, binomial and fibonacci heaps, AVL/Red Black trees, Splay Trees, Skip Lists, tries etc. 
algorithmsUnable to find the average of numbers in an array (It's hard to believe but I've interviewed such candidates) Basic sorting, searching and data structure traversal and retrieval algorithms Tree, Graph, simple greedy and divide and conquer algorithms, is able to understand the relevance of the levels of this matrix. Able to recognize and code dynamic programming solutions, good knowledge of graph algorithms, good knowledge of numerical computation algorithms, able to identify NP problems etc. Working with someone who has a good topcoder ranking would be an unbelievable piece of luck!
systems programmingDoesn't know what a compiler, linker or interpreter is Basic understanding of compilers, linker and interpreters. Understands what assembly code is and how things work at the hardware level. Some knowledge of virtual memory and paging. Understands kernel mode vs. user mode, multi-threading, synchronization primitives and how they're implemented, able to read assembly code. Understands how networks work, understanding of network protocols and socket level programming. Understands the entire programming stack, hardware (CPU + Memory + Cache + Interrupts + microcode), binary code, assembly, static and dynamic linking, compilation, interpretation, JIT compilation, garbage collection, heap, stack, memory addressing... 
Software Engineering
 2n (Level 0)n2 (Level 1)n (Level 2)log(n) (Level 3)Comments
source code version controlFolder backups by date VSS and beginning CVS/SVN user Proficient in using CVS and SVN features. Knows how to branch and merge, use patches setup repository properties etc. Knowledge of distributed VCS systems. Has tried out Bzr/Mercurial/Darcs/Git 
build automationOnly knows how to build from IDE Knows how to build the system from the command line Can setup a script to build the basic system Can setup a script to build the system and also documentation, installers, generate release notes and tag the code in source control 
automated testingThinks that all testing is the job of the tester Has written automated unit tests and comes up with good unit test cases for the code that is being written Has written code in TDD manner Understands and is able to setup automated functional, load/performance and UI tests 
Programming
 2n (Level 0)n2 (Level 1)n (Level 2)log(n) (Level 3)Comments
problem decompositionOnly straight line code with copy paste for reuse Able to break up problem into multiple functions Able to come up with reusable functions/objects that solve the overall problem Use of appropriate data structures and algorithms and comes up with generic/object-oriented code that encapsulate aspects of the problem that are subject to change. 
systems decompositionNot able to think above the level of a single file/class Able to break up problem space and design solution as long as it is within the same platform/technology Able to design systems that span multiple technologies/platforms. Able to visualize and design complex systems with multiple product lines and integrations with external systems. Also should be able to design operations support systems like monitoring, reporting, fail overs etc. 
communicationCannot express thoughts/ideas to peers. Poor spelling and grammar. Peers can understand what is being said. Good spelling and grammar. Is able to effectively communicate with peers Able to understand and communicate thoughts/design/ideas/specs in a unambiguous manner and adjusts communication as per the context This is an often under rated but very critical criteria for judging a programmer. With the increase in outsourcing of programming tasks to places where English is not the native tongue this issue has become more prominent. I know of several projects that failed because the programmers could not understand what the intent of the communication was.
code organization within a fileno evidence of organization within a file Methods are grouped logically or by accessibility Code is grouped into regions and well commented with references to other source files File has license header, summary, well commented, consistent white space usage. The file should look beautiful. 
 2n (Level 0)n2 (Level 1)n (Level 2)log(n) (Level 3)Comments
code organization across filesNo thought given to organizing code across files Related files are grouped into a folder Each physical file has a unique purpose, for e.g. one class definition, one feature implementation etc. Code organization at a physical level closely matches design and looking at file names and folder distribution provides insights into design 
source tree organizationEverything in one folder Basic separation of code into logical folders. No circular dependencies, binaries, libs, docs, builds, third-party code all organized into appropriate folders Physical layout of source tree matches logical hierarchy and organization. The directory names and organization provide insights into the design of the system. The difference between this and the previous item is in the scale of organization, source tree organization relates to the entire set of artifacts that define the system.
code readabilityMono-syllable names Good names for files, variables classes, methods etc. No long functions, comments explaining unusual code, bug fixes, code assumptions Code assumptions are verified using asserts, code flows naturally - no deep nesting of conditionals or methods 
defensive codingDoesn't understand the concept Checks all arguments and asserts critical assumptions in code Makes sure to check return values and check for exceptions around code that can fail. Has his own library to help with defensive coding, writes unit tests that simulate faults 
 2n (Level 0)n2 (Level 1)n (Level 2)log(n) (Level 3)Comments
error handlingOnly codes the happy case Basic error handling around code that can throw exceptions/generate errors Ensures that error/exceptions leave program in good state, resources, connections and memory is all cleaned up properly Codes to detect possible exception before, maintain consistent exception handling strategy in all layers of code, come up with guidelines on exception handling for entire system. 
IDEMostly uses IDE for text editing Knows their way around the interface, able to effectively use the IDE using menus. Knows keyboard shortcuts for most used operations. Has written custom macros 
APINeeds to look up the documentation frequently Has the most frequently used APIs in memory Vast and In-depth knowledge of the API Has written libraries that sit on top of the API to simplify frequently used tasks and to fill in gaps in the API E.g. of API can be Java library, .net framework or the custom API for the application
frameworksHas not used any framework outside of the core platform Has heard about but not used the popular frameworks available for the platform. Has used more than one framework in a professional capacity and is well-versed with the idioms of the frameworks. Author of framework 
 2n (Level 0)n2 (Level 1)n (Level 2)log(n) (Level 3)Comments
requirementsTakes the given requirements and codes to spec Come up with questions regarding missed cases in the spec Understand complete picture and come up with entire areas that need to be speced Able to suggest better alternatives and flows to given requirements based on experience 
scriptingNo knowledge of scripting tools Batch files/shell scripts Perl/Python/Ruby/VBScript/Powershell Has written and published reusable code 
databaseThinks that Excel is a database Knows basic database concepts, normalization, ACID, transactions and can write simple selects Able to design good and normalized database schemas keeping in mind the queries that'll have to be run, proficient in use of views, stored procedures, triggers and user defined types. Knows difference between clustered and non-clustered indexes. Proficient in use of ORM tools. Can do basic database administration, performance optimization, index optimization, write advanced select queries, able to replace cursor usage with relational sql, understands how data is stored internally, understands how indexes are stored internally, understands how databases can be mirrored, replicated etc. Understands how the two phase commit works. 
Experience
 2n (Level 0)n2 (Level 1)n (Level 2)log(n) (Level 3)Comments
languages with professional experienceImperative or Object Oriented Imperative, Object-Oriented and declarative (SQL), added bonus if they understand static vs dynamic typing, weak vs strong typing and static inferred types Functional, added bonus if they understand lazy evaluation, currying, continuations Concurrent (Erlang, Oz) and Logic (Prolog) 
platforms with professional experience1 2-3 4-5 6+ 
years of professional experience1 2-5 6-9 10+ 
domain knowledgeNo knowledge of the domain Has worked on at least one product in the domain. Has worked on multiple products in the same domain. Domain expert. Has designed and implemented several products/solutions in the domain. Well versed with standard terms, protocols used in the domain. 
Knowledge
 2n (Level 0)n2 (Level 1)n (Level 2)log(n) (Level 3)Comments
tool knowledgeLimited to primary IDE (VS.Net, Eclipse etc.) Knows about some alternatives to popular and standard tools. Good knowledge of editors, debuggers, IDEs, open source alternatives etc. etc. For e.g. someone who knows most of the tools from Scott Hanselman's power tools list. Has used ORM tools. Has actually written tools and scripts, added bonus if they've been published. 
languages exposed toImperative or Object Oriented Imperative, Object-Oriented and declarative (SQL), added bonus if they understand static vs dynamic typing, weak vs strong typing and static inferred types Functional, added bonus if they understand lazy evaluation, currying, continuations Concurrent (Erlang, Oz) and Logic (Prolog) 
codebase knowledgeHas never looked at the codebase Basic knowledge of the code layout and how to build the system Good working knowledge of code base, has implemented several bug fixes and maybe some small features. Has implemented multiple big features in the codebase and can easily visualize the changes required for most features or bug fixes. 
knowledge of upcoming technologiesHas not heard of the upcoming technologies Has heard of upcoming technologies in the field Has downloaded the alpha preview/CTP/beta and read some articles/manuals Has played with the previews and has actually built something with it and as a bonus shared that with everyone else 
 2n (Level 0)n2 (Level 1)n (Level 2)log(n) (Level 3)Comments
platform internalsZero knowledge of platform internals Has basic knowledge of how the platform works internally Deep knowledge of platform internals and can visualize how the platform takes the program and converts it into executable code. Has written tools to enhance or provide information on platform internals. For e.g. disassemblers, decompilers, debuggers etc. 
booksUnleashed series, 21 days series, 24 hour series, dummies series... Code Complete, Don't Make me Think, Mastering Regular Expressions Design Patterns, Peopleware, Programming Pearls, Algorithm Design Manual, Pragmatic Programmer, Mythical Man month Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs, Concepts Techniques, Models of Computer Programming, Art of Computer Programming, Database systems , by C. J Date, Thinking Forth, Little Schemer 
blogsHas heard of them but never got the time. Reads tech/programming/software engineering blogs and listens to podcasts regularly. Maintains a link blog with some collection of useful articles and tools that he/she has collected Maintains a blog in which personal insights and thoughts on programming are shared 
Thanks to John Haugeland for a reformatting of it that works much more nicely on the web.
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Java程序设计能力矩阵涵盖了一名Java程序员应具备的各种技能和能力,以下是对该矩阵的回答。 首先,Java程序设计师应该熟悉Java编程语言的语法和基础知识,包括数据类型、控制语句、循环结构和面向对象编程等。他们应该能够独立编写简单的Java程序,并理解如何创建和调用类、方法和对象。 其次,他们应该熟悉Java开发工具和环境,例如Eclipse或IntelliJ IDEA等IDE(集成开发环境),以及Maven或Gradle等构建工具。他们应该能够配置和管理项目,并能够使用调试工具识别和解决代码中的错误和异常。 此外,他们应该了解Java标准库和第三方库,并能够使用它们来解决常见的编程问题。这些库包括用于读写文件、进行网络编程、处理日期和时间、处理图形界面等的库。 另外,Java程序设计师应具备良好的问题解决能力和逻辑思维能力。他们应该能够分析和理解问题的要求,并设计和实现相应的解决方案。他们还应该能够进行代码调优和优化,以提高程序的性能和效率。 此外,他们应该了解软件开发中的一些基本概念和最佳实践,如代码版本控制、单元测试、代码评审和文档编写等。他们应该能够编写清晰、可维护和可扩展的代码,并遵循面向对象设计原则。 最后,Java程序设计师还应该具备良好的沟通和团队合作能力。他们应该能够与其他开发人员、测试人员和项目经理等有效地合作,以完成项目的开发任务。 总之,Java程序设计能力矩阵覆盖了Java程序员所需的各种技能和能力。掌握这些技能和能力,将使Java程序员能够成为高效、高质量的Java程序开发人员。

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