Cubicle in a sentence as a noun

"Yesterday, me: "I want to sit in a cubicle all day long and maintain someone else's crappy code.

In this cubicle with me were two 5-gallon buckets filled with confiscated lighters and pocket knives.

He just walked up to my cubicle and just said 'Why dont you use Perl to do this' and then started my crazy journey with Perl.

Same as above, but also had a cubicle in the 180 desk "resident storage facility".

They arrived at the laboratory in groups of 8-12 participants and were each seated in a private cubicle.

From "The Zen of Programming":------Hearing a disturbance, the master programmer went into the novice's cubicle.

* Currently: professionally designed cubicle set up in an office with one office mate.

And they’re attractive girls: they’re not the twentysomething warpigs you see lumbering through the cubicle hallways of Silicon Valley.

The US seems to think it can get highly qualified teachers by providing working environments akin to code monkey cubicle farms, and they're simply wrong.

They may be crappy, but there are things you can learn doing those kinds of jobs that they don't teach in school, and that you will probably never learn if you jump straight from school to the cubicle.

Ensure the set up becomes so complicated it can't explained without the help of a hundred jargons totally incomprehensible to anybody beyond your cubicle.

You won't be able to afford a good one, so you'll constantly be spending money on maintaining it, not to mention that it will strand you one day and your minimum wage job will be more likely to fire you for not showing up than the average cubicle job.

One clue, of course, is in the original story...where work/life balance is a "value" to the company...and the c-level execs are all washing their cars and feeding them pizza...while the engineering team they slave away...on the weekends in the cubicle farm...missing kids ball-games and family meals...etc.

But, nevertheless, they're happy with it, that's their life, they have their small piece of land, they garden it, they live under the sun in fresh air and not in a God-forsaken cubicle with artificial lights, and my dad would look very strangely at these "rich", paper-writing people who think he's living in a "different", lesser world.

Although cubicles are often seen as being symbolic of work in a modern office setting due to their uniformity and blandness, they afford the employee a greater degree of privacy and personalization than in previous work environments, which often consisted of desks lined up in rows within an open room.

Where John was sitting in a cubicle by himself in Mesquite, Texas for 80 hours a week painstakingly inventing all this stuff from first principles, on hardware that was barely capable, you have a supercomputer in your pocket, another supercomputer on your desk, and two dozen open source frameworks and libraries that can do 90% of the work for you.

Cubicle definitions

noun

small room in which a monk or nun lives

See also: cell

noun

small individual study area in a library

See also: carrel carrell stall

noun

small area set off by walls for special use

See also: booth stall kiosk