I’am familiar with a lot of concepts and have done a small amount of intro level shit, but how would I go about actually learning applicable/hobby level coding without taking classes?
Edit: I have decided to learn assembly
I’am familiar with a lot of concepts and have done a small amount of intro level shit, but how would I go about actually learning applicable/hobby level coding without taking classes?
Edit: I have decided to learn assembly
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Just pick a little project and do it honestly.
And when you get stuck try to understand every line of the code you steal from stackexchange.
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Nobody does this but I feel like I should say it anyways y'know?
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Tons of people do it. Same with using wikipedia. I know plenty of academics who, when trying to familiarize themselves with a topic, will start with wikipedia, not pubmed or google scholar.
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I meant that people don't audit the code, not that they don't steal from stackexchange lol.
Honestly though, if you try to start research from academic journals you're just going to get a shit-ton of complete garbage. Tons of hyperfocused niches that probably will never apply to you drowning out the two or three key papers that you actually want. Wikipedia will almost always point you to the defining paper in what you're looking for alongside a couple more general useful extensions of it.
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lol, I am pretty sure half to 80% of the industry jobs are held together by some code stolen from stackexchange.
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I mean it isn't like writing a novel, a lot of the time there is just one correct way to do things and I can't stand coder boomers who think them stealing that code from a physical book is better than stack exchange somehow
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True true. I concur my dude.
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Thank god i dont need to spend thousands of dollars on books.
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Some of those O’Reilly reference books are really good if you do need a physical copy.
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do y'all literally just copy/paste code from SO without even trying to understand it? 🙄 no wonder China is winning
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I’m sick of my field and have been playing with the idea of cooding instead. Whenever I try I always end up with something far too basic or far too complex for my skill level. Do you have suggestions on links or tutorials that are good for someone with a basic fundamental knowledge?
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How complex are those complex projects to you? They are probably the best source of learning, as a lot of programming is breaking down complex systems to simpler ones
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Exactly this.
I don't think there's necessarily projects that are too complex for people. Just too time consuming.
You're not going to really get held back by something being hard, even as a beginner there's always a way to push through and get a little more done. But if you're just coding so that you have a finished project you may get burned out not by the difficulty of it, but by the time it takes to reach any measurable progress.
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