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How should you start learning programming?
Asked 2 years ago
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has this question
2 years ago Lopasso Genrihe posted:
Learning to program is not a fun process unless you make it one. You need to spend most of your time in front of a computer - learning, coding, and fixing (debugging). To make this journey fun, you need friends who share the same interest - to become a software engineer. You need people who you can ask questions from (getting help), who you can discuss programming stuff with (brainstorming), and whom you can explain what you have learned (teaching). Getting help, brainstorming, and teaching will boost your learning curve three-fold.You are going to need help if you want to win time. Don’t be too arrogant to ask questions. As a beginner, most often I would prefer to try to understand things on my own than ask someone for explanation and would end up wasting a lot of time.
Couple of hours in the weekends is not enough. As an active learner, you should be always in the “zone”. You need to be learning everyday, even if it is an hour or two.
Replies
Replied 2 years ago
2 years ago Enrico Porlosa replied:
Hi. I actually don't really agree with you, because I don't think it's boring. And even more so for those who are just starting to do it. As a programmer with 8 years of experience I can say that programming is very interesting. Yes, if you do the same projects all the time every day, you might get bored very fast, but if you do everything different all the time, it's just fine, believe me.
Replied 2 years ago
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Replied 2 years ago
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Replied 1 years ago
1 years ago Mina Morse replied:
Deep understanding of core problems of programming motivates a lot. Now I understand the reason why I failed to become a successful C++ programmer in two recent years. I've learned everything online, based on tutorials, guides and forum posts. I did my best to ask as many questions online, as possible to be involved in the process at least several hours a day, as you mentioned. But still too little progress. The first reason is rooted in CPP itself. Maybe it was a bad idea to start with CPP, and initially I should have tried Python or Swift instead.. Next, I had no other professionals behind me than those of https://assignmentcore.com/, occasionally providing CPP assignment help, and these are experts pursuing other goals compared to community of code enthusiasts. I now agree that it's crucial to have someone behind you, who you can address your problem to, or simply ask a question or brainstorm an issue together, as you've put it.