While I haven't actually worked with (been paid for) my skills in this area, I am quite good at it. I have completed the basic and advanced classes at school (for C# and Java) and was a tutor for some classmates there as well. I am currently working on a video game developed in C# in my spare time, so my skills aren't rusty by any means.
Though I may have to look through my books (which I still have from school, so they are legitimate) from time to time, I have found only a hand-full of...
While I haven't actually worked with (been paid for) my skills in this area, I am quite good at it. I have completed the basic and advanced classes at school (for C# and Java) and was a tutor for some classmates there as well. I am currently working on a video game developed in C# in my spare time, so my skills aren't rusty by any means.
Though I may have to look through my books (which I still have from school, so they are legitimate) from time to time, I have found only a hand-full of problems that I haven't been able to figure out. I would like to think that I think outside the box, which in this field is almost required. For my capstone project (which is pretty much like an accumulation of everything learnt in the classes, plus some extra research done at the students discretion all wrapped up into a database and an external program interface) I did a fictional online musical instrument store called Sound Wave Music.
With it, I made a Microsoft Access database that recorded sales, customers, representatives, inventory, products, prices, and, well, you get the picture. The fun part was the application, which was basically what the employee would use to setup a sale. It had to dig the data up from the database, change it, and put it back in, all without messing up the database itself. Pretty fun, huh? I think it is, and that is why I am here. I am a nice person to be around, I stay on topic, and best of all: I know my programming.