• xavier666@lemm.ee
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    2 months ago

    It’s a good thing that no serious company uses excel spreadsheets to manage their data, right? Right?

    • _bcron@midwest.social
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      2 months ago

      Be me, postal worker. One of our machines uses a csv file to attach zip codes to bins. See fresh engineer decide to change one zip code in notepad really quick. See file’s formatting get wrecked. Spend next 6 hours watching all the mail spit out of the very last bin every time they think they finally fix it as if machine has irritable bowel syndrome. Engineer earns nickname ‘boy wonder’ first week on job

      • curry@programming.dev
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        2 months ago

        This is why I always save contents as a new file instead of overwriting the original one when I’m using a machine that isn’t mine. I’ve been burned so many times by flimsy newline characters, proper unicode support, legacy encoding and many other stuff you assume it should be already in place.

    • marlowe221@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      There are teams where I work that are basically using Excel as a database and SharePoint as S3 in automated processes… But at least no one is going to DIE when those things fall over!

    • Todd Bonzalez@lemm.ee
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      2 months ago

      Look, if Excel is the last mile and everyone is properly plugged into a corporate database to pull numbers, then great.

      But way too many companies manage everything from a network share full of xlsx files…

      • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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        2 months ago

        I think it’s a hole in education. Unless you go to school for IT or programming the most advanced thing you’re probably going to be taught is spreadsheet, and yet out in the world of business you need actual database software, and Excel can kinda sorta look like it’s somewhat accomplishing that for a while so that’s what gets used.

        When the only tool society has been taught exists is a hammer, every problem looks like a nail.

        • xavier666@lemm.ee
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          2 months ago

          One of my seniors uses xls as a word processor. I screamed but Teams was on mute.

          • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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            2 months ago

            As in, would type up a memo in Excel? Woof.

            Sometimes I want a more free-form tool that can be a journal or a checklist or a spreadsheet so that I can plan and calculate and such. My personal journal sometimes reads like The Martian, “Okay, my solar panels make 165 kilowatt hours per sol, and I need 47 of it for my project, meaning I have 108 kilowatt hours per sol left over…” But I look at things like OneNote and fall right off them.

    • lennivelkant@discuss.tchncs.de
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      2 months ago

      cries in data analyst

      Did you know our company is over a thousand years old, possibly even two? Recent dives into our digital archives have unearthed invoice records dated to the year 1021, though we’re also investigating the validity of one dated to 215.

      Whoever decided to make dates a manual entry text field without validation should be forced to write SQL by hand, without syntax highlighting, autocompletion, syntax checks, reference or looking up stuff, querying a database with no schema or data dictionary.