austin-cheney 10 days ago

When I search the results are not quite what I would expect. I have just under 10,000 commits in TypeScript language and my location is listed as Dallas/Fort Worth.

When I search for TypeScript with location Fort Worth there is only one result. When I change the location to Dallas there are 10 results. Search cannot resolve results for Dallas/Fort Worth with any combination of white space.

As a bonus candidate search tools never include a "negative search", as in results to exclude. For example: TypeScript, but not React.

1
jasonjmcghee 10 days ago

I have to ask- you're not interested in candidates if they have experience in certain frameworks?

austin-cheney 10 days ago

It was just an example, but yes, I would like to disqualify results that I don't want. It is just a general feature I wish were widely available in many places. If I were looking for jobs, for example, I would not want to waste time on that which is not relevant or outside my level.

pcthrowaway 10 days ago

If you were looking for jobs and had Typescript experience but not React experience, then sure, you might want to exclude jobs that require React experience.

An employer looking for a candidate has no reason to exclude someone with React experience though. If they want a candidate with Express.js experience, candidates may still have both. They just need the positive search in that case.

StefanBatory 10 days ago

I think the belief is that they think that knowing some framework/language/tool etc. is harmful, i.e a candidate not knowing that would be better, has some better habits, and so on. I've saw that come up a few times

austin-cheney 10 days ago

> An employer looking for a candidate has no reason to exclude someone with React experience though

I completely disagree and you are focusing on a made up rhetorical example far too much. There is always benefit to more efficiently excluding results you don't want.

em-bee 10 days ago

i'd like to see an example that actually makes sense. the only one i can come up with is that i might not want to hire people who have more experience with windows than with linux. but even in that example people with less windows experience would be ok.

if you have a realistic use case please describe it.

pcthrowaway 10 days ago

Yeah, if you're hiring for a senior-level role, 10 years of experience with Linux is 10 years of experience with Linux, even if the person also has experience (perhaps even more than 10 years) with Windows.

austin-cheney 10 days ago

> i'd like to see an example

Why? You are clearly missing the point and lack imagination. Another example won't satisfy you the way you think it will.