It's a CS final project episode

that sounds pretty cool actually, what does that look like

I'm not sure what you mean.
If you're asking how the tech stack works: Crystal was used for routing and SQL stuff, and as a web socket host. It's a neat little compiled language that looks like ruby.
Elm was used for front end logic, and for communication with the server. It was overkill for this particular project, but fun to use nonetheless. It mostly just re-drew the board in response to messages from the server.

If you're asking what the project was:
a Go game server. People created games and invited others to play. They'd see the moves live. I went for a minimalist look, but my group mates decided to add some random shit here and there.

It's not a search engine, but it almost feels like a similar level of complexity, unless we're talking Google level search engine.

It's a Software Development class. It's part of our CS major because my school's too small to have a separate Software Engineering program.

It's basically "learn everything about real-word professional coding in one semester" and they just throw shit at the wall and see what sticks. I've learned a lot, the webshit at the end is the only thing that feels poorly taught and out of place especially since most of the stack we're supposed to use is pretty obsolete.

Nah senpai, we're forced to use shitty-ass Jetty and MariaDB(MySQL for poorfags). The CSS framework is the only free choice.

>misunderstands my point
Okay?
I never said it was about walking anyone through code. My point was that teaching people web development in a CS course is like teaching someone how to do woodwork in a mathematics course. Sure CS is useful in web development but it's not the job of a CS course to teach menial shit like web development.

>what you described doesn't sound even remotely challenging if you have a few weeks to work on it

We don't.

If you had everything else done for the class you had a week at most during all your other finals.

Our software development class also did limit the frameworks we could use, but at least the project was easy.

Our framework was worse because it didn't report exceptions. Just swallowed them. I think jetty is more of an extensible web server, while we used some enterprise-tier software that took 30 seconds to compile and start

>when you have to do all the work yourself because you were assigned a team with a gook who clearly cheated through her degree and a tranny who slacks off hard.
Seriously, fucking wrote the entire project worth 40%, 25% for individual effort and 15% for team effort. Fuckers didn't even try.

How the fuck do these people handle the workplace?

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They complain about discrimination and blackmail HR into promoting them

>How the fuck do these people handle the workplace?
They don't. They're the same whiny spoiled millennials who cry about not being able to find a job after they graduate because they think their degree is an automatic pass.

hearing these stories, it makes me glad I go to a decent school. heavy on the math side and theoretical side of computer science but still an appropriate amount of practicality