How did you learn programming?
For my part, I learned most of my lessons through question-posting sites and forum posts, as well as YouTube. How was it for you?
For my part, I learned most of my lessons through question-posting sites and forum posts, as well as YouTube. How was it for you?
Today I wrote an exam and unfortunately forgot to put my notebook off the desk from the break, which I had used to study. Five minutes before the end of the lesson, the teacher noticed it and accused me of cheating, which gave me a grade of 6. Does anyone know if she's allowed to…
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Hey, I was wondering if I can get a career changer job with a Microsoft/Udemy certificate? I'm currently an industrial electronics technician, but I'd like a job in IT because I'm more interested in that area. If it really is enough, which courses should I take? I have already taken a JAVA and Python course…
Would it be a good idea if my partner and I had an argument and discussed the topic?
Autodidactic mainly. But it started with the fact that my father had shown me in very rough traits (up to the For-Schleife about).
I taught myself, and there was no WWW at that time.
By reading other sources
In principle autodidactical.
and University
—-
can also be used at home
To be able to program correctly, you have to complete a study. Everything else is bullshit.
So…
I’ve completed a study, but how to program correctly, no one taught me that I had to find out for myself.
Maybe something went wrong. Well, otherwise you could do all jobs after graduation. Nevertheless, training is necessary everywhere. And you have to gain experience, of course.
I think that’s not true. For me, you can program as soon as you control the syntax, a certain vocabulary of a language and paradigms independently of the respective languages. And you can also learn this outside of your studies.
But as I said, this is purely a matter of interpretation.
Because you also learn to program in your studies.
It’s okay. Economically, however, only requires the comparatively low supply of computer scientists.
Shouldn’t this be punished?
That’s why, yes.
However, there are also many people who can actually program and still write grayish code.
And companies that pay little for programmers and put them under time pressure.
And other reasons for bad software.
Therefore, the quality of software is so miserable.
You can actually become programmers without all this. However, only because demand is large enough.
Training is also something different from studying, I can imagine that you learn more craftsmanship.
And yes, experience is of course extremely helpful.