mac@tesla.UUCP (Michael Mc Namara) (04/29/85)
Recently, at the request of Cornell's chapter of the IEEE, I wrote an
automatic resume formatting program. They produce a book once a year con-
taining the resumes of all the soon-to-be graduating Electrical Engineering
students. Needless to say, companies eagerly await each edition of this
document.
Anyway, they needed a simple way to get the 200 or so students to come
up with a resume in a format they could easily incorporate into their book.
This year's book has resumes in about 150 different styles, on as many
different typewriters.
So I wrote a program that assume the user knows nothing about unix or
[tn]roff, but simply has access to this program. They are prompted for
name, address, education, work experience, and some optional fields like
citizenship, social security number, activities, et cetera. Then the
program takes their input, and wraps around it some [nt]roff macros I wrote
that allow typical resume constructs, and sends the resume off to either
our laser printer, or a spinwriter.
It is a particularly painless way to format that leap to a new
job, or to the world of employment in general. I just gave them the program
to test, and after they're happy with it, I'd be glad to mail it to anyone
interested. If I get a lot of requests, I'll send it to net.sources.
(maybe even net.sources.games :-) )
mac@tesla
...!cornell!tesla!mac
Michael Mc Namara
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I want to go where the climate suits my clothes | My employer has no opinions
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