Some one else is taking credit for the work I have done [duplicate]





.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty{ margin-bottom:0;
}







1
















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?










share|improve this question









New contributor




Tesy is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











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


















1
















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?










share|improve this question









New contributor




Tesy is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











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














1












1








1









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?










share|improve this question









New contributor




Tesy is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.













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






share|improve this question









New contributor




Tesy is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









New contributor




Tesy is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Apr 18 at 8:55









Monoandale

3,84652359




3,84652359






New contributor




Tesy is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









asked Apr 18 at 5:39









TesyTesy

191




191




New contributor




Tesy is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





Tesy is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






Tesy is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




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














  • 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










0






active

oldest

votes

















0






active

oldest

votes








0






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes

Popular posts from this blog

Plaza Victoria

Puebla de Zaragoza

Musa