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It can be argued that the ability to write machine code in FBD, CFC, LD, etc. graphics. is there a specialty?
Is the activity of a compiler of machine codes in graphics, for PLC programming, as a separate specialization, is it in the register of specialties and issuing such people a diploma in which the FBD programmer is written, for example. ? Or is it a kind of area for advanced training of automated control systems engineers, electricians, instrumentation and automation fitters, process engineers, automation engineers, etc. ? And in fact, such people just have some skills in working in a software environment for a PLC?
What does the employer write in the work book when he hires such a compiler of codes? Perhaps at the enterprise he performs some one-time work, but was hired in another specialty.
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In fact, yes, these are individual programmers with their own specific baggage of knowledge. Moreover, in addition to knowledge of languages and automation standards, one must have a good understanding of the subject area (how it works that the programmer automates - a boiler room, a refrigerator house, the Sayano-Shushenskaya HPP, etc.), which actually means an understanding of physics / mathematics at the level of a good applied university.
Read Fixik Papus and get enlightened.
If you want to read legal waste paper - you can proceed. There you will find that if something like "programmer" or "analyst" is written in your diploma, you can.
I have a diploma "Automation and Telemechanics" (0606). There was no PLC then, they read Algol and Fortran. The main subject of TAU, i.e. the ability to draw lines with a slope that is a multiple of 20 decibels per decade.
Why are these questions? In the work book, they write what you want in essence, that is, at all of the jobs, I came up with a position for myself, and I could even be the king of the hill and the norms
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