Some one else is taking credit for the work I have done [duplicate]
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This question already has an answer here:
How to deal with someone taking all the credit
4 answers
Handling Credit-takers [closed]
2 answers
I have joined a new, big company very recently (a month ago).
I work as software engineer.
I have noticed that something was not done correctly, so I created a pull request for the refactoring and showed it to my colleagues. One my colleagues suggested:
"it's very good change, we must do it, but let's stop [for now] as we are in the middle of beta release."
So I stopped working on it and focussed on other things. After a week I cleaned up the pull request and asked everyone to review it; on the same night I got messages from my other colleague, telling me he had copied all my changes into a new pull request with some testing changes, and asking me to close the original pull request.
I asked "what's the point, why I should I close mine at all", he said he needed that for linting (there was no such urgent rush for linting), and I did close my pull request convinced that credit will go to me, and after agreeing that I will continue to work on it.
The next day my colleague did not give me a chance to finish my pull request, he finished up and wrapped up his own and convinced the whole team to deploy it.
Doesn't this sound like stealing my work?
When I asked him about this, he said: "This is the way I am".
How can I explain this to my manager and what can I do to get credit for the work I have done?
work-environment colleagues
New contributor
marked as duplicate by Gregory Currie, gnat, virolino, Mister Positive♦ Apr 18 at 10:54
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
|
show 2 more comments
This question already has an answer here:
How to deal with someone taking all the credit
4 answers
Handling Credit-takers [closed]
2 answers
I have joined a new, big company very recently (a month ago).
I work as software engineer.
I have noticed that something was not done correctly, so I created a pull request for the refactoring and showed it to my colleagues. One my colleagues suggested:
"it's very good change, we must do it, but let's stop [for now] as we are in the middle of beta release."
So I stopped working on it and focussed on other things. After a week I cleaned up the pull request and asked everyone to review it; on the same night I got messages from my other colleague, telling me he had copied all my changes into a new pull request with some testing changes, and asking me to close the original pull request.
I asked "what's the point, why I should I close mine at all", he said he needed that for linting (there was no such urgent rush for linting), and I did close my pull request convinced that credit will go to me, and after agreeing that I will continue to work on it.
The next day my colleague did not give me a chance to finish my pull request, he finished up and wrapped up his own and convinced the whole team to deploy it.
Doesn't this sound like stealing my work?
When I asked him about this, he said: "This is the way I am".
How can I explain this to my manager and what can I do to get credit for the work I have done?
work-environment colleagues
New contributor
marked as duplicate by Gregory Currie, gnat, virolino, Mister Positive♦ Apr 18 at 10:54
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
4
What sort of credit are you looking for? What sort of credit did your coworker recieve?
– Gregory Currie
Apr 18 at 6:02
If he was working on the same PR. Your contributions should be visible.
– dan-klasson
Apr 18 at 7:15
1
Can someone who understood the question please make an edit to clarify and reformat? Hard to read as it is now.
– Nyakouai
Apr 18 at 7:26
I can't read that, can someone sort the formatting please?
– spikey_richie
Apr 18 at 7:33
1
Did you just close your PR or did you delete it (and all relating branches?)
– FooTheBar
Apr 18 at 9:47
|
show 2 more comments
This question already has an answer here:
How to deal with someone taking all the credit
4 answers
Handling Credit-takers [closed]
2 answers
I have joined a new, big company very recently (a month ago).
I work as software engineer.
I have noticed that something was not done correctly, so I created a pull request for the refactoring and showed it to my colleagues. One my colleagues suggested:
"it's very good change, we must do it, but let's stop [for now] as we are in the middle of beta release."
So I stopped working on it and focussed on other things. After a week I cleaned up the pull request and asked everyone to review it; on the same night I got messages from my other colleague, telling me he had copied all my changes into a new pull request with some testing changes, and asking me to close the original pull request.
I asked "what's the point, why I should I close mine at all", he said he needed that for linting (there was no such urgent rush for linting), and I did close my pull request convinced that credit will go to me, and after agreeing that I will continue to work on it.
The next day my colleague did not give me a chance to finish my pull request, he finished up and wrapped up his own and convinced the whole team to deploy it.
Doesn't this sound like stealing my work?
When I asked him about this, he said: "This is the way I am".
How can I explain this to my manager and what can I do to get credit for the work I have done?
work-environment colleagues
New contributor
This question already has an answer here:
How to deal with someone taking all the credit
4 answers
Handling Credit-takers [closed]
2 answers
I have joined a new, big company very recently (a month ago).
I work as software engineer.
I have noticed that something was not done correctly, so I created a pull request for the refactoring and showed it to my colleagues. One my colleagues suggested:
"it's very good change, we must do it, but let's stop [for now] as we are in the middle of beta release."
So I stopped working on it and focussed on other things. After a week I cleaned up the pull request and asked everyone to review it; on the same night I got messages from my other colleague, telling me he had copied all my changes into a new pull request with some testing changes, and asking me to close the original pull request.
I asked "what's the point, why I should I close mine at all", he said he needed that for linting (there was no such urgent rush for linting), and I did close my pull request convinced that credit will go to me, and after agreeing that I will continue to work on it.
The next day my colleague did not give me a chance to finish my pull request, he finished up and wrapped up his own and convinced the whole team to deploy it.
Doesn't this sound like stealing my work?
When I asked him about this, he said: "This is the way I am".
How can I explain this to my manager and what can I do to get credit for the work I have done?
This question already has an answer here:
How to deal with someone taking all the credit
4 answers
Handling Credit-takers [closed]
2 answers
work-environment colleagues
work-environment colleagues
New contributor
New contributor
edited Apr 18 at 8:55
Monoandale
3,84652359
3,84652359
New contributor
asked Apr 18 at 5:39
TesyTesy
191
191
New contributor
New contributor
marked as duplicate by Gregory Currie, gnat, virolino, Mister Positive♦ Apr 18 at 10:54
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
marked as duplicate by Gregory Currie, gnat, virolino, Mister Positive♦ Apr 18 at 10:54
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
4
What sort of credit are you looking for? What sort of credit did your coworker recieve?
– Gregory Currie
Apr 18 at 6:02
If he was working on the same PR. Your contributions should be visible.
– dan-klasson
Apr 18 at 7:15
1
Can someone who understood the question please make an edit to clarify and reformat? Hard to read as it is now.
– Nyakouai
Apr 18 at 7:26
I can't read that, can someone sort the formatting please?
– spikey_richie
Apr 18 at 7:33
1
Did you just close your PR or did you delete it (and all relating branches?)
– FooTheBar
Apr 18 at 9:47
|
show 2 more comments
4
What sort of credit are you looking for? What sort of credit did your coworker recieve?
– Gregory Currie
Apr 18 at 6:02
If he was working on the same PR. Your contributions should be visible.
– dan-klasson
Apr 18 at 7:15
1
Can someone who understood the question please make an edit to clarify and reformat? Hard to read as it is now.
– Nyakouai
Apr 18 at 7:26
I can't read that, can someone sort the formatting please?
– spikey_richie
Apr 18 at 7:33
1
Did you just close your PR or did you delete it (and all relating branches?)
– FooTheBar
Apr 18 at 9:47
4
4
What sort of credit are you looking for? What sort of credit did your coworker recieve?
– Gregory Currie
Apr 18 at 6:02
What sort of credit are you looking for? What sort of credit did your coworker recieve?
– Gregory Currie
Apr 18 at 6:02
If he was working on the same PR. Your contributions should be visible.
– dan-klasson
Apr 18 at 7:15
If he was working on the same PR. Your contributions should be visible.
– dan-klasson
Apr 18 at 7:15
1
1
Can someone who understood the question please make an edit to clarify and reformat? Hard to read as it is now.
– Nyakouai
Apr 18 at 7:26
Can someone who understood the question please make an edit to clarify and reformat? Hard to read as it is now.
– Nyakouai
Apr 18 at 7:26
I can't read that, can someone sort the formatting please?
– spikey_richie
Apr 18 at 7:33
I can't read that, can someone sort the formatting please?
– spikey_richie
Apr 18 at 7:33
1
1
Did you just close your PR or did you delete it (and all relating branches?)
– FooTheBar
Apr 18 at 9:47
Did you just close your PR or did you delete it (and all relating branches?)
– FooTheBar
Apr 18 at 9:47
|
show 2 more comments
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4
What sort of credit are you looking for? What sort of credit did your coworker recieve?
– Gregory Currie
Apr 18 at 6:02
If he was working on the same PR. Your contributions should be visible.
– dan-klasson
Apr 18 at 7:15
1
Can someone who understood the question please make an edit to clarify and reformat? Hard to read as it is now.
– Nyakouai
Apr 18 at 7:26
I can't read that, can someone sort the formatting please?
– spikey_richie
Apr 18 at 7:33
1
Did you just close your PR or did you delete it (and all relating branches?)
– FooTheBar
Apr 18 at 9:47