If you don't code, why not? have you ever considered in learning a programming language? What has been the most challenging part in the learning?
I’ve started and stopped many times 😅 need to be more consistent with learning and application so I stick with it
I've a plan to start to learn Rust in the next 10 days.
I've heard its hard but I love to learn it.
I learnt coding in a bootcamp and it was the best investment so far.. 3 months and such a useful skill for life
(I had difficulties to learn it on my own, so the focus class and people with the same mindset was great help)
I'm learning Python and MySQL together, what do you suggest learning next @stani.lens ?
Time. Starts and stops.
Immersion would be my preferred method from and early age like with any language.
I bought an online course of python, I really like programming but after that seems complicate go on with data sciences, but I decided subscribe myself in a face-to-face course to start with programming logic and so on, this is one of my main goals this last half of the year
Started coding back when I was in 9th-10th
Started With C
And Today ,Solidity is in progress
(Also Diving deep into React Native )
I've tried many times. As a father of three, I have limited time, so I had to go solo. And when you're on your own, every learning platform is overwhelming, however good it is (I've tried so many!). There's abundant information, inside and outside those platforms, a lot of ingenuity in the design of learning programs...but if you get stuck, you miss a person beside you who will help you out and solve your very specific doubts.
I think there's nothing compared to sitting beside a human telling you to do stuff and giving you a deadline. If I could do it, I'd happily become someone's unpaid intern.
Getting back into it. The time it takes and needing the resources to live while going back to school.
If you're beginner in coding, let's follow each other and continue the journey 🚀
With a family and a full time job, the challenging part is time for me. I have the willingness 100% but can't find the time to devote to it. Plus need a easy to follow starting point too as I have no prior coding experience
I started out as a self-taught dev six years ago. One of the most challenging aspects was learning to think like a programmer and solve problems that way. Equally overwhelming was navigating through the number of frameworks and technologies, and finding the right courses that I could really stick to!
What helped the most was coming up with a simple project like a to-do list or a neat dashboard after I got a handle on the basics. This projects were a huge plus during my interviews and helped me land a full-time dev job, all without previous CS education.
At the start of this journey, it’s easy to feel dumb and constantly question yourself - I know I did and still do on the job. I even took a coding break for a few months. It’s a tough journey and that’s why a lot of people quit. But it’s worth pushing through!
I've been trying to learn on and off for many years. Been recently getting back into it with heightened motivation. I think the most challenging part is find a way to go about it that works for you. I think this has been my struggle but I've only cracked this for myself...so hopefully we're moving 😎
I have learned to code because I liked it, a lot of people don’t feel the same way
Currently learning JavaScript, Typescript, NestJs and NodeJs.... Will be moving to python as soon as I'm done.
Coding is a great skill