Yep, this was a lesson that took me a bit to learn as well. Perfect code that doesn't get used because it doesn't solve the right problem is useless to a company, so no one is going to want to pay someone for it (much less promote them).
Yep, this was a lesson that took me a bit to learn as well. Perfect code that doesn't get used because it doesn't solve the right problem is useless to a company, so no one is going to want to pay someone for it (much less promote them).