This is Why Programming Is Hard For you

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The Coding Sloth

The Coding Sloth

Ай бұрын

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Programming is hard, but you can do it.
This video was sponsored by Brilliant
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Пікірлер: 973
@TheCodingSloth
@TheCodingSloth Ай бұрын
To try everything Brilliant has to offer-free-for a full 30 days, visit brilliant.org/TheCodingSloth . You’ll also get 20% off an annual premium subscription. I hope this video helped any of you who felt stuck when learning to program. Better start thinking like a programmer and not rely on tutorials. EDIT: I LOVE PRIMES CONTENT. I USED HIS IMAGES FOR MEMES/ENTERTAINMENT ONLY NO HATE
@ovecka111
@ovecka111 Ай бұрын
Great video as always, I love them.
@user-ef1rs5to5y
@user-ef1rs5to5y Ай бұрын
Programming is the most counterintuitive thing ever. I normally pick up on things pretty fast; but when entering the programming world you have to be IN THE KNOW to understand every phrase. Analogy: When your just starting math you learn that math is done with numbers. Perhaps your learn to divide, add, subtract etc. But once there’s random letters and things in there that’s when you **reference points** dwindle. Example: 5(5)=x(squared). Show this to anybody that’s only learned the basic fundamentals of math and they’ll look at it and try to solve it only using previous things they’ve learned. Therefore: you need to context of how these things operate. All learning is built on a foundation of prior knowledge. Dude.. Computers are humbling. Everyday I question my intellect because of them. Everyday I’m left with a headache. Programming sucks.
@nikoryu-lungma
@nikoryu-lungma 25 күн бұрын
I can tell you this one thing that you were wrong about. Programming is NOT HARD. I can guarantee that it is not. You know what is? It's the political battles in every single company you work in. They will spend their their time to argue about what features they should add/remove, then remake the design like...a zillion times. Then, they're gonna test your "patience" by seeing how you comply with their st**** demands. Those are the things that everybody will encounter in every company they work for. Other than that, I agree, you need to stop watching tutorials.
@aru6575
@aru6575 11 күн бұрын
isn't brilliant just one of among other app that will end up being a tutorial hell? I'd rather advertise something else if i were you
@super-cylinder
@super-cylinder 7 күн бұрын
@@aru6575 people say it's interactive learning, maybe when you interact with environment you'll learn better? maybe?
@overpercent
@overpercent Ай бұрын
I stopped watching tutorials when I realized I could read the documents by my self and honestly speaking. Reading docs is so much better than watching tutorials.
@neanda
@neanda Ай бұрын
same here, on both points :)
@enubiakadaniel8132
@enubiakadaniel8132 Ай бұрын
I haven't searched for tutorials in a long time, when I want to know something I search then go the the official docs, I learn more that way sometimes I get carried away by other functions that might solve a future problem or make my code writing better.
@fsharplove
@fsharplove Ай бұрын
It depends on the quality of the doc, the videos and you. I learned more about Authentication/Authorisation with Identity management watching a 10 min Nick Chapsas video than reading plenty of doc about the subject. I use also KZbin tutorials to be aware of what is done outside of the languages/framework I use.
@romanmoniz
@romanmoniz Ай бұрын
@@enubiakadaniel8132Im a beginner in python, what do you mean by docs?
@tgc517
@tgc517 29 күн бұрын
Remember: ctrl+f
@kimmitomany
@kimmitomany Ай бұрын
im so cooked
@CloudyJC
@CloudyJC 21 күн бұрын
same here
@Cheesehead302
@Cheesehead302 20 күн бұрын
I'm getting out of this stuff while I'm ahead, it's just too frustrating for me.
@starfoxdelta
@starfoxdelta 19 күн бұрын
​@@Cheesehead302 :
@senzmaki4890
@senzmaki4890 19 күн бұрын
weakness ​@@Cheesehead302
@omega3fatass61
@omega3fatass61 18 күн бұрын
​@@senzmaki4890 yeah how are puzzles too much for you
@a_rehman_k
@a_rehman_k Ай бұрын
Realistically speaking I built a full stack website for a local client the website was simple I used bootstrap for the UI and node for backend with MongoDB for storage. The project was relatively simple but i remember just how frustrated and stressed I was when I was coding it. Yelling back and forth at ChatGPT. Trying to scrape through stack overflow. Today (6 months later) i opened the code again and I was blown away just how simple it was. The point being that: what you find hard today wouldn't be as hard in the future, the point is to keep going and keep learning. Cause remember: the more you F**k around the more you find out.
@enubiakadaniel8132
@enubiakadaniel8132 Ай бұрын
In essence Programmers should fvck around More. Only your imagination holds you back.
@runyourprogram
@runyourprogram 29 күн бұрын
hell yeah man thank you ❤️❤️❤️
@Jasturtlegang
@Jasturtlegang 28 күн бұрын
Sorry what?
@mehaulMC
@mehaulMC 23 күн бұрын
Well said 😂!
@glyakk
@glyakk 22 күн бұрын
Very true. Code bases I agonized over in the past now seem trivial.
@Foojaleeckalikeelamaka
@Foojaleeckalikeelamaka 16 күн бұрын
One of the hardest parts of coding for me is that often you can't see all the tools at tools at your disposal. When I'm doing electrical work & get stumped I can go over to my toolbox, open it up & just have a poke around to see if there's a tool or combination of tools that might do the job or at least inspire the solution. With digital tools its much harder to look at all your options.
@Cheesehead302
@Cheesehead302 10 күн бұрын
I think you really hit the nail on the head with my problem with this stuff. With various parts of my life I've been so conditioned to having a set of limitations and tools that do very specific tasks, no more no less. With this stuff there is page after page of potential tools, and when the time arises that you need one, you don't even know it exists.
@Mitch-kd3uc
@Mitch-kd3uc 5 күн бұрын
This is something I genuinely struggle with too. I almost think it might be worth having a giant print out of every single tool of a language, but my walls aren't big enough
@SpragginsDesigns
@SpragginsDesigns Ай бұрын
This year i landed a great web developer position starting at $30/hour full time. I love it because all the hours i am putting in is making my programming skills WAY better by working 8 hours a day writing and testing and debugging and getting feedback. Its been a great experience and praise the Lord i got this job.
@TheSCPStudio
@TheSCPStudio Ай бұрын
Good for you, most of us are suffering. But hey, keep boasting.
@SpragginsDesigns
@SpragginsDesigns Ай бұрын
@@TheSCPStudio I was there too man. I just landed it 4 weeks ago. A huge tip is to apply to local places. That's what helped me.
@disguisedcentennial835
@disguisedcentennial835 Ай бұрын
@@TheSCPStudio this is why you’re suffering. Fix your nasty paradigm and learn how to be happy for others.
@disguisedcentennial835
@disguisedcentennial835 Ай бұрын
He is risen!
@adambickford8720
@adambickford8720 Ай бұрын
@@TheSCPStudio Don't be a crab in a bucket
@Politely_Indifferent
@Politely_Indifferent 16 күн бұрын
I thought I was the only person in the world who kept saying to myself "Maybe this isn't for me" every time I struggled to work out a problem or thinking why isn't this concept sinking in. I can't stop thinking about a coding problem when I have one and I'm so mentally exhausted after I finally crack it that I feel like I've just been to war. Perseverance is definitely necessary when coding in my experience, as is having fun solving problems. Spent many nights screaming at my monitor, but the feeling you get when you finally solve the problem is amazing. Very funny video btw.
@TheMelonbros123
@TheMelonbros123 9 күн бұрын
I'm currently stuck in the same boat, I feel like everyone breezes through these simple concepts that I just cant fathom at the moment. Any advice?
@Politely_Indifferent
@Politely_Indifferent 8 күн бұрын
@@TheMelonbros123 Everyone learns concepts at different rates, there are things that you may breeze through that others may struggle with. My advice would be to make sure you read the official documentation (can be kinda geeky), look at other people's code which incorporates the concept you're struggling with to see how they're utilizing the concept and play around with the concept yourself to see how it behaves. Everyone says it but it's true, Practice and Perseverance.
@pit19931
@pit19931 5 күн бұрын
That's the satisfaction of this job when you see the thing you have been building for a long time finally working. And what you say about code isn't necessarily bad. I always catch myself thinking about projects or about code I want to write or wrote
@trys10studios65
@trys10studios65 2 күн бұрын
I've been there even though I had written tons of projects. Doing projects you're motivated to do is a great way to avoid frustration or burnout imo. Doing projects just to do them is not a good approach, find something that interests you and give yourself plenty of breaks, and give yourself the benefit of doubt. Just my 2 cents lol
@agastyajain4129
@agastyajain4129 Күн бұрын
idk man im in cs at uni and i feel like this isnt for me, Ive never liked coding too much and always been average at it
@not_a_cool_handle
@not_a_cool_handle Ай бұрын
As a HTML engineer, I disagree
@its_past_here
@its_past_here Ай бұрын
You will never know why this comment has so many negative replies 🙃😅🤣😂
@DanniDuck
@DanniDuck Ай бұрын
@@its_past_here All of the rich software devs turned everything devs that can make an actual product lmao. Go learn UI/UX and you'll understand why you're broke.
@plumbing1
@plumbing1 Ай бұрын
As a plumber, I also disagree
@Leandro_vask
@Leandro_vask Ай бұрын
As a CSS martial artist, i agree
@DiegoMorales-iy7fw
@DiegoMorales-iy7fw Ай бұрын
so tru
@codysheridan324
@codysheridan324 Ай бұрын
8 minutes in I realize I’m just watching a really well crafted ad for Brilliant. You don’t need tutorials, you need Brilliant. smh.
@meltygear5955
@meltygear5955 24 күн бұрын
46 upvotes? really? people can't be that dumb. In case people are that dumb, no it's not a Brilliant ad because dozens of people say the same way without the segue.
@Metall1st3
@Metall1st3 23 күн бұрын
​@@meltygear5955realizing that it's not just a brilliant ad would require logical thinking and the lack of it is the reason many of them are here in the first place. Unless, of course, person is being sarcastic, but I wouldn't be surprised if he genuinely believes what he says
@DaRealEaze
@DaRealEaze 22 күн бұрын
​@@meltygear5955r/woosh
@tw1931
@tw1931 13 күн бұрын
@@Metall1st3 it is actually a really well crafted ad, but that doesnt change anything on the fact that what he says is true
@super-cylinder
@super-cylinder 7 күн бұрын
@@meltygear5955 r/ihavereddit
@AfiqZudinHadi
@AfiqZudinHadi Ай бұрын
Something I'd like to add is to read up on books on software development like Pragmatic Programmer, Martin Fowler's books, etc. It helps with the foundation of your skills
@jnartist3411
@jnartist3411 Ай бұрын
Well, as I am currently in College (University), I think this is one of the most important lessons. I am really enjoying the books from "No Starch Press".
@ashwinrawat9622
@ashwinrawat9622 Ай бұрын
Oh come on, how much can you over engineer a detonator?
@marloelefant7500
@marloelefant7500 25 күн бұрын
100% agree. When looking back at university, the one thing I'd like to change is reading more books, and rely less on professor provided material. Another thing is doing more networking, vitamin B really helps a ton when searching a new employer.
@mikahbee
@mikahbee 15 күн бұрын
Up to and including Think Like a Programmer because it helps with problem solving which is what programming ultimately is.
@pie2610
@pie2610 19 күн бұрын
been in tutorial hell my whole development journey. I’m suffering.
@dmitriy_frostoff
@dmitriy_frostoff Ай бұрын
If the author of the *The Coding Sloth* won't mind, a few timestamps...) 0:00 - 6:11 the definition of the problem _Why Programming Is Hard For you_ Tips by *The Coding Sloth* : 6:12 Tip 1: Break down problems 8:36 Tip 2: Project - based learning 9:05 Tip 3: The Feynman technique 9:43 Tip 4: Embrace failure as a learning tool. Fail stands for: First Attempt In Learning 9:57 Tip 5: Practice Regularly and for a long period of time 10:17 Tip 6: Stop comparing yourself to others Thank you, *The Coding Sloth* , for your doings!!! Great Job!!! 🙏🙏🙏🙏
@flamindoritos
@flamindoritos Күн бұрын
Dude why did you write his name in bold three times
@itachiluvzu5162
@itachiluvzu5162 Ай бұрын
I couldn't agree more, people think its just another language, how hard can it be, but in reality its much more than that because copying a script will never be the same as writing one. To write one, you must know exactly what you're doing.
@seaweed428
@seaweed428 Ай бұрын
i agree, i dont see why people would spread hate on something that obviously isnt meant for them
@mesekkai
@mesekkai Ай бұрын
Because of school just teach you how to copy and alot of these work shops are the same. They just teach you how to copy work. I felt like i wasted my money because i didnt really learn shit that would help me get a job in college. My college suck ass with the math and sciences but its was all i could afford. But id didnt know it sucked until after i graduated
@seaweed428
@seaweed428 Ай бұрын
@@mesekkai im a first year in college and i disagree. it depends on a lot of factors and college isnt for everyone. for me, i just focus half the time on passing minimum and the other half on actually learning stuff on my own for personal projects later. it isnt that bad imo. but then again, im a tech major
@atticus2274
@atticus2274 12 күн бұрын
@@mesekkai youre comment is really toxic and does more damage than good. I went back to school after already getting my bachelors because alot of these content creators for CS are just as bad as your example. When i went back to school for CS i learned so much i wouldnt have gotten from online diy learning. May not be for everyone but ive already learned more in 1 year at community college than 4 years browsing the internet for actual learning that didnt involved the same cookie cutter learning plans i see constantly with these type of youtube channels
@atticus2274
@atticus2274 12 күн бұрын
@@seaweed428 thats how it should be honestly. I started working on my own personal projects as well because our professor told us taking the courses and getting a degree is barely anything anymore. Make your projects we worked on speak for themselves. Thats why you see all over the internet, "I did 4 years of CS and graduated but cant get a job." then you realize they never did anything outside of their education.
@TheFocusedCoder
@TheFocusedCoder Ай бұрын
Great breakdown, failing and making errors doing real things is often the best teacher
@aceofswords1725
@aceofswords1725 Ай бұрын
Yeah, if you don't have a good textbook or manual... It is all about five-minute tutorials and 50-step-by-step-recipes-how-to-do-something-very-specific books. There is a real crisis in computer programming teaching literature. And no, online documentation is no teaching aid. There is no system to it, no linear flow that would naturally and easily take you from basic to expert.
@brodriguez11000
@brodriguez11000 Ай бұрын
Pretty much every job ever. Life is one problem after another. Hopefully we'll have what we need to solve it and getting paid to do it.
@gentozik500
@gentozik500 14 күн бұрын
​@@aceofswords1725Yea, it's not lineal, but if you need only a new piece of info (new component in Unity, for example, idk), then it will be good (if the doc has a good amount of info)
@MM-bw1lo
@MM-bw1lo 29 күн бұрын
This video helped and freed me, definitely right on time. Thank you so much!!!! I'm implementing the steps like coding for an hour, teaching myself and simplifying. Thanks again, this rocks!
@MarcusAlexander-hu8er
@MarcusAlexander-hu8er Ай бұрын
This is a very valuable video for me. I have seen a lot of videos saying this but this video really open my eyes with its detailed explanation. Thank you, the coding sloth.
@JD96893
@JD96893 Ай бұрын
I believe i am well on my way to becoming a competent programmer. I feel like what really has helped is just doing projects that inspire me, often times things that solve a problem i have. I just wish i could land a job, feel like that is even harder than learning to program.
@adizzzleV3
@adizzzleV3 Ай бұрын
Well put man, well put. Im a jr javascript dev and i studied JS like crazy and it did not prepare me for the logical thinking and how to use the things i learned to solve issues. Learned that the hard way.
@SorAxel
@SorAxel 19 күн бұрын
Watching this while I am stuck at work with a problem and I feel stupid and thinking how my other developpers friends are just leagues ahead of me and how undeserving of the job I have, so yeah, it is hard
@TheJaguar1983
@TheJaguar1983 Ай бұрын
As a programmer, I love Zachtronics games because they test your logical thinking AND coding skills, particularly Shenzhen I/O. It's basically a simulation of building and programming microcontrollers where your physical space is limited, you can only use a small number of assembly-like instructions and you often have to think about how the blocks are running in parallel. Using the average example listed, there is a task that requires you to keep a running average of the last X values, you are limited to integers between -999 and 999 and you have no division instruction.
@ajayvadadre7660
@ajayvadadre7660 Ай бұрын
Great timing needed this right now ❤
@fullmetaltheorist
@fullmetaltheorist 19 күн бұрын
Funnily enough, this is what I was explaining yesterday to a first year student as a senior. I told him that it is more about solving problems and making practical solutions and less about the nemorizing the concepts.
@kimhorpang4560
@kimhorpang4560 Ай бұрын
As a software student, who feel lost and nearly give up on my major, thank you very much for this video
@STaSHZILLA420
@STaSHZILLA420 Ай бұрын
Bro, your cooking analogy is awesome! Subbed.
@j1t176
@j1t176 21 күн бұрын
This is really reassuring because I’m trying to learn JS and have a good understanding of troubleshooting and solving “the puzzle” of getting something how I want it. I started by writing down what every line of code did
@767corp
@767corp 20 күн бұрын
stock videos with that leet speech bubbles are precious , make a series out of it !
@cody_codes_youtube
@cody_codes_youtube Ай бұрын
Valid points! And shout out to my fellow Web Dev Cody for his cameo! Haha. I liked how you structured your points for the UNDERSTANDING of the coding and programming.
@JusticeTrace
@JusticeTrace Ай бұрын
Thank you! I was just asking myself about ”the mindset” yesterday because I feel like I’m missing that
@erfanzare3199
@erfanzare3199 Ай бұрын
loved your edit man😂
@MyCodingDiarie
@MyCodingDiarie Ай бұрын
This video deserves way more views. Sharing it with all my friends!
@balance_andbliss
@balance_andbliss 17 күн бұрын
I needed this. Thank you 🙏🏿
@TheAthleticCoder
@TheAthleticCoder Ай бұрын
Just started my journey with coding! Great info!
@abdullahsaid181
@abdullahsaid181 Ай бұрын
00:58 Man, I didn't keep watching your video when I saw this clip, I literally jumped into this awesome website and started making for my current project It's awesome, and I'll watch the wep dev Cody video as well
@thejams2810
@thejams2810 22 күн бұрын
Brilliant video! Thanks! Absolutely love your sense of humor haha
@mrrobot-mn6re
@mrrobot-mn6re Ай бұрын
If you want to understand programming fast, and actually love it,learn discrete math and DSA, programming will never be a problem, this is actually the foundation and meaning of a computer science degree.
@dyggas
@dyggas Ай бұрын
What is DSA?
@hoangcon4811
@hoangcon4811 Ай бұрын
Data Structures and Algorithms
@dyggas
@dyggas Ай бұрын
@@hoangcon4811 Ah, thank you, wasn't familiar with this abbreviation
@spektree8448
@spektree8448 Ай бұрын
Bro in my discrete math we ain't learning shit just like Jenn diagrams and what a set is and some weird arrows 😭
@JeffThePoustman
@JeffThePoustman Ай бұрын
Venn? Genuinely checking.
@KannaVenkatesan
@KannaVenkatesan Ай бұрын
Nice video man. Thanks for the explanation 🔥
@Rubiktor012
@Rubiktor012 20 күн бұрын
I had completely given up on learning gamedev because it was so overwhelming, and I thought it just wasn't for me. But this has made me realize it is overwhelming for everyone. So I guess I'll keep going. Thank you.
@edwardmarlowe7926
@edwardmarlowe7926 21 күн бұрын
Love the video, thanks for creating it
@ChaoticNeutralMatt
@ChaoticNeutralMatt Ай бұрын
Oh. You did give me an idea though regarding the learning aspect of problem solving. Thanks.
@GigachadMann
@GigachadMann 16 күн бұрын
I'm dealing with these issues as an average programmer right now, so from the bottom of my heart, thank you for making this video and for making me feel better 💚
@notadrunkard7367
@notadrunkard7367 Ай бұрын
I think you are the best programming channel here in yt. Thanks a lot
@Templarfreak
@Templarfreak Ай бұрын
the best way to get out of tutorial hell imo is to find smaller and easier ideas that you want to do and that you think you can do and do them on your own. it also helps to do something like game modding or javascript, something where you dont have to worry about compilation, or making state control, or having to worry about rendering things on your own, etc. it helps massively simplify things so you can get just the basics of working through logic and only logic.
@keerthanadevendran8404
@keerthanadevendran8404 15 күн бұрын
Your videos gives me answers to the questions I have been wondering for too long.. it clears my confusion.. thank u so much ❤❤❤
@RadekStastny42
@RadekStastny42 14 күн бұрын
I learnt programming in the 80s. But at first I did not know that I am learning programming. I was interested in books about math and logic and I really liked to solve logical problems. Then I read about computers and I remember, how I basically asked people things like: "How you can make computer to do this?" and then I met my friend's father, who was professor of computer science and he gave me some more books about computers, algorithms and math to study. And then I've got to use real computer for the first time. It was ZX Spectrum+2 with Z80 CPU and 128K of RAM. It was very slow and had Basic in its ROM and then I have learned assembly, because that was the only way, how to get at least some speed from it. Later, I learned more languages and computers got much better too. I work as software developer more than 25 years now and I am always learning new things. Computers, languages, and everything else have changed a lot in the past 40 years, but one thing remains the same: The problem solving. Analyzing the problem, breaking it down into blocks, functions and features. Deciding, how to address each of the problems and how to tie them back together later. Programing is not that difficult, if you approach it from the right side.
@Giga_Bro22
@Giga_Bro22 Ай бұрын
Thanks, thats nice!🥰
@emilyau8023
@emilyau8023 Ай бұрын
The toxic environment was what threw me off. I know toxicity is in every field, but tech people can be truly built different.
@icmedia6314
@icmedia6314 Ай бұрын
Same, how am I supposed to get better with all this negativity around me, pulling me down.
@emilyau8023
@emilyau8023 Ай бұрын
@@icmedia6314 I wish you the best! I did pivot more to the business side to decrease the occurrences.
@KimYoungUn69
@KimYoungUn69 Ай бұрын
Where? There is no field like programming where everything is opensource and documented..
@bluex217
@bluex217 Ай бұрын
In my experience, it's not just programming. No pun intended when I say tech guys have a bug up their ass. I know guys who are into networking and configuration and they're the same way.. everything you say within a tech centric conversation will be put under a microscope and pessimistically analyzed
@LiveType
@LiveType Ай бұрын
Toxicity and elitism in niche, difficult to learn/adopt tech centered communities? Couldn't be. I went into a discord asking about how a tool worked because my hack job 30 min solution to creating a discord plugin didn't scale and reverse engineering discord from web pack ain't fun. I asked a question about my initial approach and got roasted for it. Hard. I laughed at how hard they flamed me for my approach. It's been years since that last happened. The best part was my question didn't even get answered. (I assumed the general answer was no you can't do that) Thankfully they did inform me somebody was already working on what I wanted so I copied that and built from there. Still took a solid ~6 hours to get things fully working due to my laughable typescript knowledge to the point where ai tools didn't make a meaningful difference in speeding things up. It's been 6 months and it appears there is so little demand for it, the plugin still hasn't been fixed. Let me tell you, I would have probably spent a solid 50 hours and another 4 attempts before I could have come up with the solution I copied. I straight up missed 2 important things during my intense Ctrl + Shift + f searching. It's always a humbling experience learning you know nothing.
@MjYosh
@MjYosh 20 күн бұрын
So close to 100k! Just found this channel and i love it
@JDgiggles
@JDgiggles Ай бұрын
Thanks for your videos. They really help me.
@bausHuck
@bausHuck Ай бұрын
The hardest thing for me to actually grasp at the moment is focusing too much on trying to get it right. Its like I spend hours on a task, then I hit a wall, can't figure out how to solve the problem I need to solve. I'll hit my head against the wall for hours wondering why I can't figure out such a simple task. Then I go play some games, or go to bed, and the next day, I look at the same code and the solution comes to me, then I might spend another hour or 2 implementing it. I guess I'm saying, its hard to know when to take a break, take a step back, refresh your mind. Maybe watch some KZbin videos on programming to see if something jumps out at you.
@CallousCoder
@CallousCoder Ай бұрын
As someone who’s programming for 40 years now. I can say that I don’t know the syntax of most languages that I use. Because I use so many and they mangle in my brain. C and 6502 assembly I know by rote because I did if so much. The rest I just shamelessly lookup. Because I understand the concept of something I need to do and Google is great aid to find that. And learning to write without frameworks in the 80s on bare metal, really teaches you to think in a way most developers don’t anymore. I bet most developers don’t know off the cuff how to turn lowercase into uppercase or vice versa with only bit wise operations. Yet the ascii character set was designed for that! Or print a number to the screen, writing that conversion. Especially if you don’t have a division with remainder instruction.
@mj4iq792
@mj4iq792 Ай бұрын
thx for the video
@johnlabuci96
@johnlabuci96 29 күн бұрын
been there, done that.. my advice, learn and understanding the concept, practice, and learn how to connect the dot.. lastly, never give up
@ruidorepesteves
@ruidorepesteves Ай бұрын
Even though 30 minutes seems like a very short block of time, I still think that it is a good amount of time. At least it helps you build consistency, something important when it comes to master a skill.
@spudwish
@spudwish Ай бұрын
IMO the difficulty comes from the size of real-world apps: it's difficult to know where to jump in, or how to isolate only the parts you care about. A little app that you've written from the ground up - easy
@kevinh5212
@kevinh5212 13 күн бұрын
That was beautiful.. thank you, I've subscribed
@leslieabajoli2495
@leslieabajoli2495 15 күн бұрын
loved this video! thank you
@robertfletcher8964
@robertfletcher8964 Ай бұрын
I've been watching prime for years now and I've never gotten the "buy my course and you'll be rich" bullshit from him, He's regularly streamed his content for free and it was very good quality. The message I've taken from prime is that - programming is hard, and you have to work hard - even if your at rock bottom in life you can turn your life around and succeed. - getting a job in fang isn't always nice - don't listen to twitter trends - we're all dumb, so don't overcomplicate things - be kind to people and give them grace Seems a bit unfair to make him the face of the shitty side of programming. especially putting him beside techlead.
@TheCodingSloth
@TheCodingSloth Ай бұрын
lol that's my fault for that and it wasn't my intention. It was intended solely for memes/entertainment. I love prime's content
@siddharthkrishna8463
@siddharthkrishna8463 Ай бұрын
He was certainly cited as someone with expertise I think it's just the curse of the streamer. No matter how much he emphasizes how hard it is the format itself makes people think it'll be easy
@mehlover
@mehlover 19 күн бұрын
This really helped me. And also helped me feel better. Also glad you talk about imposter syndrome and failure because I feel like not many coders and programmers talk about itnat all.
@JPC1999
@JPC1999 14 күн бұрын
I experienced this (2:40) during University work with data structures and algorithms. We were given large complex sets of data and had to create our own sorting algorithms without using any imported libraries and extremely limited built in libraries. It was seriously tough, but I think it taught us a lot.
@Kimarauskas
@Kimarauskas Ай бұрын
This is the video i was searching for ❤
@mikemjlove4988
@mikemjlove4988 Ай бұрын
As someone who knows about 8 languages and can pretty much pick up any new language if I want to in a couple of days, I think programming is only hard until you understand the concept. You need to realise program itself is nothing but its a way you're interacting with the operating system which in turn interact with the cpu. So every statement you write, every loop, every function, they all goes back to talk with the machine. Now if you stop learning a language for the sake of learning and instead think how each command you write is interacting with the system, you'll feel a natural flow of logic, the funny thing is that you only need to be good in 1 programming language (preferably any object-oriented language) and every other language is almost same with some syntax difference. There might be some special features in each language but over the time, you understand that most of the language work in similar fashion and some special feature is only introduced to ease up/mess up developer's life. That being said, it's best to learn language with practical projects so you can test and realise what you did wrong or could be written in better ways.
@marloelefant7500
@marloelefant7500 25 күн бұрын
Ok, how long does it take you to pick up Prolog?
@minawolf3935
@minawolf3935 22 күн бұрын
A dude still stuck in oriented, programming and inheritance of C++ since 2 months 🙋🏻‍♀️
@loganrmx8479
@loganrmx8479 Ай бұрын
As a scratch engineer, I disagree
@muskanagarwal7937
@muskanagarwal7937 28 күн бұрын
Loving your videos and editing style. Would love to know about how you edit it, what's your process? Edits, voice-over, stock footage, etc.
@I.Z.Phooto
@I.Z.Phooto 22 күн бұрын
Using cooking as an example is an interesting way of comparing them. In one example you replace the sugar with a different sweetener because you know sugar is a sweetener. By that logic it makes it would make sense that if you wanted to replace the title of something without using the data type you would just use a different method for a title. That doesn't seem like problem-solving to me that just seems like using the knowledge that you have through finding alternate ways of doing things you already know. Is it seems similar to Googling what are different sweeteners. Instead it's Googling what are different ways to code a title. I used voice to speech and I'm also a beginner and I'm pretty sure isn't a data type
@Akronymus_
@Akronymus_ Ай бұрын
I am literally sitting at a new job pouring over the database model to try and find out how to implement some functionality to delete some data when some related data gets deleted, but over like 10 joins. Understanding a domain is so much harder than just typing some code. Anyways, time to stop procrastinating and hit my head at the wall of the domain model some more.
@chaserightnow
@chaserightnow Ай бұрын
I'm seven months into my dev job and I still don't understand the the code base.
@good_eats876
@good_eats876 Ай бұрын
@@chaserightnowdude 😂😂😂😂😂 i felt that deep in my heart
@spektree8448
@spektree8448 Ай бұрын
Bro i code so slowwww. Whenever i find time and actually focus i end up barely making any progress on a project
@MartinJnr
@MartinJnr 29 күн бұрын
I Really liked the video. As a career programmer, I find I deal more with people than I do with actual coding, perhaps to the detriment of my own coding skills.
@a.z.b.1916
@a.z.b.1916 11 сағат бұрын
My experience as a developer is that writing code based on a well defined user story is like finding a golden egg. Majority of a programmer's time will be spent on stuff like: - Making sense of stupid user stories that written like a long business proposal - Screwing around with configurations, access issues, compatibility hiccups - Fixing problems with CI/CD pipelines which are suppose to make life easier except they never fully automated - Digging logs in AWS or Azure and trying to figure out why the last 5 deployment failed - Ending up on a project as a front end angular developer only to find yourselves migrating jenkins pipelines to github actions after your first week
@neilgomes6049
@neilgomes6049 Ай бұрын
First yr of compsci degree. I will say, learning the simple stuff like arrays, loops, if/else, exceptions, objects and classes. Is easy. But applying it to a scenario is wayyyy harder. You can’t just write code. You have to design the system first. Then it gets even worse, with big O, hashing, linked list etc. it feels like you’re just constantly confused and you just learn stuff on the spot.
@LiveType
@LiveType Ай бұрын
Very true. I remember bashing my head against the wall trying to figure out the logic to a homework question like 20 years ago. It was a modified binary search for reference and it felt impossible. 10 tries and probably 15 hours later and still couldn't do it. Forgot about it and was reading a comment on a forum and for some reason my brain connected the dots and I went back to the problem. 3 lines of code later I felt like the biggest idiot that had ever lived. Everything is "easy" when you know how to do it. It's absurdly difficult if not outright impossible when you don't. Building the foundation to ensure problems don't feel impossible is very hard and takes hundreds if not thousands of hours of practice. No exceptions. People who seem to pick it up in a fraction of the time generally speaking got practice doing something similar somewhere else for extended periods of time I've found. I've yet to run into someone who is an exception to this. I'm certain they exist as people will point out but I haven't run into them.
@TumbleGamerTK
@TumbleGamerTK Ай бұрын
I often Plan, code, delete code, plan again, code, plan, delete some code, plan, plan, delete all, plan code, Repeate until feel happy with code
@IIDeadlyDownie
@IIDeadlyDownie 16 күн бұрын
Thank you for this, I just finished the Google analyst course like today, and I felt like I barely retained much myself on SQL and R and felt stupid relying on help from good people on the internet that help me point out where I went wrong. But seeing that it’s part of the process gives me more confidence in failing and not to get too bogged down on it. I am a big believer in projects and portfolios as practice and evidencing for potential employers and I have my first project up on kaggle done in R, just wished I knew exactly every single line of code did lol. Next project I’ll focus more on SQL and go through the (e)motions on that.
@ZenoTasedro
@ZenoTasedro 17 күн бұрын
Great video! A lot of great analogies. Definitely that tip 1 is solid, the best programmers are masters of complexity management. The only way i know to get better at that is to keep trying
@X-MEN21
@X-MEN21 Ай бұрын
The key is to never get comfortable, you have to embrace rapid change, complexity, software moves at the speed of electricity and soon it'll move at the speed of light, it's a rapid in a river, you can take a sip, take a swim(if you're bold enough) or stay dry and thirsty, there really is no inbetween here, give it your all chaotically or do nothing.
@ChaoticNeutralMatt
@ChaoticNeutralMatt Ай бұрын
It really depends on your goal. I would argue this applies to a subset primarily.
@VaibhavShewale
@VaibhavShewale Ай бұрын
building logic is the basic thing that one should learn first
@violettracey
@violettracey 29 күн бұрын
Thank you!
@shaolin6150
@shaolin6150 17 күн бұрын
This is exactly what I'm going through right now. I was given an already built project that I have to dissect. It's like learning an engine and it's parts
@LukasSoftwareDeveloper
@LukasSoftwareDeveloper Ай бұрын
Not sure about taking first step is "Solving Problem". Mostly, don't have problems that's the key element - "Generate Problems". You're a developer yet also an a bit analyst and architect because most of the time you know what technologies you are going to use. So how to generate problems and get out of tutorial hell and properly use them? 1. Start from simple idea or copy paste and idea. Let's say I choose to create Service Desk. 2. Analyze the topic to be familiar with, let's say I don't know what is Service Desk and I need to analyze this word - "Service Desk" first. 3. Okay, now I know what Service Desk means and how do I build it? See? Now you have a problem! So now we need to know HOW to build this type of solution. So what you will do next? 1. Analyze familiar Service Desk systems and take out MVP's. 2. Let's say our MVP is: Create login page, Create roles and assign them, reroute authorized users to ether user page or "role" based page, create a ticket, assign ticket, resolve a ticket. See? Now I generated ton of problems! Great! Let's now start from beginning: Let's plan our database design. Unless you don't know what is database or how to design it, bingo! New problem, go and analyze it. Then draw class diagram or create database schema. Great now you have database schema now implement it with Prisma or w/e. One problem gone. Now you need to know what pages will look, how do I do that? Yep, again, new problem, solve it! You will start from framework and drew few screens how it should look and what it should consist of. But wait, firstly I need to create login page and roles right? Yep, sounds logical, do that... See what I did? You're now a problem generator and solver! You ask a question, create a problem, solve it by searching for information how to do it. It's easy to have clear TASK, but not clear GOAL. Most programmers get clear TASK, they do the task and they move on. I'm not sure if you want to focus on that part, because creativity is another motivation generator and solving problems by your own it's the key and learning path you should take. Don't learn what you don't need, learn and execute what you need for your solution. Edit: I stopped video after he mentioned problem solving and moved to project based programming and probably what I wrote is exactly that lmao
@mean-guy
@mean-guy Ай бұрын
I was also hard yesterday 🥺
@ericboadu8525
@ericboadu8525 Ай бұрын
👀
@edasdrawnworld9190
@edasdrawnworld9190 Ай бұрын
0_o
@muzi-the-bushi4516
@muzi-the-bushi4516 13 күн бұрын
I'm a Junior Programmer and can code whole Web apps to completion and I still struggle to be a good programmer in the exact sense of this video, this is 100% accurate
@jd52wtf
@jd52wtf 13 күн бұрын
The planning stage cannot be overstated. Make a block diagram of everything your program needs to do then go about building it. Also keep your mind open to possible "better ways" to do things.
@tonyc1938
@tonyc1938 19 күн бұрын
I can’t focus because he’s saying programeen and not programming
@HeadCodeMonkey82
@HeadCodeMonkey82 27 күн бұрын
And the further you go in your career, the more important soft skills become. At a big company you need to coordinate with many different people from different teams all with different deadlines, goals and pressures than you.
@shirkrin
@shirkrin 9 сағат бұрын
Finally someone that doesn't tell people about magic tricks and how to "become a Senior Pro Coder with this technique" - thank you for making this video man. I've been working as a self-taught, full-time software developer for 20+ years. Learning new languages and technologies over the years and all of what you explain here literally applies all of the time. 👏
@MyCodingDiarie
@MyCodingDiarie Ай бұрын
This video is like a ray of sunshine on a cloudy day.
@Skeffles
@Skeffles 10 күн бұрын
Brilliant video! It's painful watching someone stuck in tutorial hell, but a step we all have to overcome.
@benk2584
@benk2584 18 күн бұрын
Coding in college is so hard, I’ve spent every day all week coding and when I get home the last thing I wanna do is keep staring at code, but I really want to learn more and get better but I just get burnt out so fast. Not to mention I have 3 different projects due by next weekend so I’m just finding it difficult to improve on 1 thing when I feel like I’m juggling so many concepts at once
@moncherie4774
@moncherie4774 9 күн бұрын
Same 😓
@TypeiZ
@TypeiZ 12 күн бұрын
I made the CS50 Python course over the last 6 months. Whatever i did was without any tutorial. I needed for some problem sets days to solve them. But after solving them i have learned so much. i also made my own projects inbetween and evolved them with new learned skills and technics. Now i'm feeling like i have really solid base in python and that i have the basics for going into every direction i wanted with it (data scraping, cyber security, gamedevopment... whatever i can think of).
@valenciawalker6498
@valenciawalker6498 Ай бұрын
Im in boot camp for SE. Working on ma psychology as well as finishing up. Books help articles and KZbin tutorials.
@josh5231
@josh5231 13 күн бұрын
Honestly I think the best way to develop the "programmer's mindset", is with the one step nearly every tutorial I have seen skips. That of course is the planning stage. Learning to plan out a projects forces you to break problems down, consider possible issues, consider data structures, ect.. IMO that is how and where you develop the midset. To bad no one I have come across really covers this in a way that new programmer's can grasp.
@Poe168
@Poe168 28 күн бұрын
I agree, problem solving and writing codes are different.
@Labanadev
@Labanadev 12 күн бұрын
wow, someone actually explained it as how it looks and how it is. well done.
@IPG_terminator
@IPG_terminator 11 күн бұрын
I’m literally in the process of learning code, and this perfectly explains my problems as I’ll look for a video or online explanation rather than figuring it out myself. Using cooking as an example is another perfect representation as I’ve begun making my own recipes which makes me feel like I know more. Now I just need to be able to do the same with coding
@IPG_terminator
@IPG_terminator 11 күн бұрын
Another method of explanation could be like subjects in school, I was amazing at math, I was capable of understanding topics immediately and I could find my own ways to solve the problems. But something like English I simple stuck to the guide
@pun15h3r.
@pun15h3r. 21 күн бұрын
hahaha man i laughed so much in this short video! Sadly cause it's so much truth in it too xD You got an new sub man! Thanks for the video!
@dialgos7574
@dialgos7574 19 күн бұрын
Wow this video perfectly sums everything up! I started my first Software Dev job at a small company 2 weeks ago and feel so overwhelmed with everything. All I ever did was "program stuff in python" and now I have to learn 100 different tools on the fly because thats just how that works.. Its really fun but also frustrating and hard because I constantly have to ask for help since I don't even know WHAT I don't know..
@tezzla6358
@tezzla6358 19 күн бұрын
how did bro get hired😭🤣🙏🙏
@dialgos7574
@dialgos7574 19 күн бұрын
@@tezzla6358 I am german. I think the software dev problem is a lot worse in the UK and USA than in germany. But still.. i applied for like 30 jobs and got 2-4 job offers. I was quite surprised that they took me too but I talked to them about it and the thing is that I still study so 1. I am cheaper and 2. I study the exact topic that the work with (LLMs) and people that know stuff about LLMs are really rare since its a relatively new topic. =)
@karla5395
@karla5395 12 күн бұрын
This was exactly what I needed!
@steveo104
@steveo104 16 күн бұрын
Great video! Fundamentals are key! Frameworks and libraries are great, you still need to understand the underlying languages and concepts.
@MrSlm1982
@MrSlm1982 Ай бұрын
As a software dev. I wouldn't say that it "IS" hard, but it CAN be hard or challanging. But you're spot on, on whats needed to be a good dev.
@Kenken002
@Kenken002 23 күн бұрын
This is perfect lmao i taught my self terraform by repeatedly smashing my head against the wall. i dont remember any of the syntax, but i understand how they fit, and different ways i can make them fit.
@techdudefyi
@techdudefyi 7 күн бұрын
man you had me ROFL xD , great video, just joined your discord channel!
@IdaOpti
@IdaOpti 8 күн бұрын
Thanks for saying that programming is hard. It gave me hope to continue learning!
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