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I'm more interested in the design aspects
Webdesign, app development etc
Not so much the coding/programming and the engineering behind it.
So UI/UX
Is learning to code a resource to pursue this career path?
I'm more interested in creative type jobs
is this field suited for me?
Facts.Like Yeah mentioned there are different trains of thought regarding coding and learning to. I started out with Java and it seemed to make all the other Object based languages easier to understand.
I need a new career path
Is it too late to get on this wave?
I'm more interested in the design aspects
Webdesign, app development etc
Not so much the coding/programming and the engineering behind it.
So UI/UX
Is learning to code a resource to pursue this career path?
I'm more interested in creative type jobs
is this field suited for me?
Nice article...it mentions Udemy and Code Academy. Udemy is awesome but expensive, most good classes are $199 BUT they often have sales. I got 5 courses for $15 apiece. I'll let y'all know when the n xt sale happens. Rob Percival's iOS, Android, and Web development courses might just be the best you can find on the Internet. He even sets you up with a year free web hosting with unlimited storage. In his iOS app dev course he's having us build a true clone of Instagram, Tinder, and Uber so that we know how to build an enterprise level app. I just started but within the first hour We're already building apps.
Here's the article BTW
For each person trying to learn how to code
If (person.iq > 8 THEN
If (person.patient) THEN
person.progammingability = "possible"
patience is probably my weak point in which I have to work on mostly. How much time do you guys thats still in the process of obtaining a degree or CCNA invest into programming, network, database or whatever it may be? I feel like I'm exhausted from school and 2 jobs so when I get home I rarely do any extra studying or reading. Basically, its not my passion I just want the money but I'm now in my senior year of college taking all major related classes.
Im majoring in information technology with a concentration of Network and Security, I was originally a CS major but was intimidated by the math that comes with it. I had a car expense that I had to take care of also so I was working full-time. I then switched to a part time job to become full time in college but still needed a bit more income in order to satisfy my expenses. I then accepted a school job which helps me, now my part-time job wants to give me full-time hours starting Summer. My courses vary, regarding coding, I will only code maybe in one or two of my classes per semester. My classes currently involves learning about database, a foundations of network security class & lab, a human computer interactions course, and a quality testing and assurance course so not too much coding going on this semester I believe. I haven't taken up any internships because the ones currently offered are unpaid internships and irrelevant to my field.What are you majoring in? Why not minor in CS? Why are you working two jobs and not an internship? If you're in a decently major city a tech internship will probably pay more than your two jobs. When I went to college I actually kind of stay still on certain skills but u coursework had programming in it. My upper level years of undergrad I was working in the industry already and you will always fine ways to program. Automation requires programming even something like macros are useful and help keep you're minding thinking like a programmer.
For those interested in a career in finance or something data oriented, I'd recommend taking a few classes in R / SQL / Python.
One thing is ww gotta stop making it aound like all you need to become a programmer is an online class lol. Cats really thing a bootcamp or workshop is going to make them programmers. Programming is not something you get into because you think its where the money is, you have to think a certain way to become a GOOD programmer. Coding is universal and most companies outsource a bulk of the stuff that isnt super complex, so we gotta stop setting these unreal expectations for people who arent in the industry.
I disagree. Bootcamps I don't necessarily agree with for beginners, but online resources such as Udemy, Udacity, CodeAcademy and Treehouse are more than adequate to get a person started on the path of programming. First off programming is as programming does. However you get the knowledge is less as important as getting the knowledge. And yes it takes practice and effort, but that goes for just about anything. Those courses serve as a great foundation in which a person can build on, it's been proven many times. You can learn to think in a certain way, let's not act like it's some purely genetic/ nature versus nurture concept. I mean if we're going to be real about it, there are more than a few people that graduate from computer science programs that are woefully inadequate when it comes to actually doing real world work. I say that to bring up the point that what matter is that you learn and practice and experiment and are active in the community.
Mark Cuban was NOT a school trained programmer. He actually got his degree in business. He got a job working as a salesman for a computer company. While doing that he figured he might as well start learning about computers so he started by reading manuals and reference books. Eventually he became a programmer and instead of working for a company he and his buddies started a computer firm and pioneered broadcasting radio and tv over the internet. Evenetually that company was bought by Yahoo and he became a billionaire. I'm sure there were many "real" programmers who knew much more than he did before he started learning.
I knew I should have just started this thread instead of asking somebody else to do it, because my purpose and aim was to inspire others to get into programming for various reasons. It wasn't meant to be a pompous or arrogant thread where people who are already in the field make it seem like it's the hardest thing in the world to do.
For the record I've already been in the industry without programming, I worked for Apple corporate, and ExxonMobil as a computing geologist where I worked side by side with their in house developers by testing and documenting their prototype and experimental projects, as well as working for the most technical of the spy agencies. It's not rocket science, and there are many benefits to learning to code that has nothing to do with looking for a job. Like I mentioned before my mentor when I interned at the Environmental Protection Agency was on the development team that wrote the code for the avionics for the F-16 fighter jet, and he always told me that coding is something he thought most people should learn just because...and he also warned me abvout the arrogance of programmers even though he himself was one.
This thread is for support, sharing ideas, keeping up with advances in programming, and to foster a community of coding/development at all levels. Please let's leave discouragement, arrogance, and negativity out of it.