Why I Hate Programming and I Hate Coding (Real Reasons)

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  • Опубликовано: 5 авг 2024
  • In this video I want to share with you my 5 things why I hate programming based on my 10 years of experience. Sure programming is a nice thing and gives you lots of benefits but still as any profession it has own pros and cons. There also lots of things why I like programming but here I want to share why I hate coding
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Комментарии • 11

  • @MonsterlessonsAcademy
    @MonsterlessonsAcademy  2 года назад

    Why I like programming so much - ruclips.net/video/cBlUiX6d_AM/видео.html

  • @katarina4tiaotiao
    @katarina4tiaotiao 3 года назад

    thanks for the tips!

  • @gatsomoses6986
    @gatsomoses6986 3 года назад

    Really very useful!!+

  • @sergio_leone_
    @sergio_leone_ 3 года назад

    I'm agree at 100%, and also I've something to say.
    What I don't like (all of these relate to intensive startups):
    1) Urgent task that 'should be done for yesterday'.
    In startups, when team prepare new version for some presentation all tasks sounds like "it's should be done for yesterday because we must impress our potential customer" and boss personally ask developers to work overtime. And it's OK! ...but only first 5 times :) Than it happens again and again, you got overwork and this aspect of "task is urgent and super important" is oppress you; as a result you loose any interest to tasks and become irritable (and your colleague as well), and as a result you start to burn out.
    And this is problem when your boss/manager do not understand (or closes eyes) that "fast development" == "low quality development" == "more time for further refactoring".
    2) When your manager switch developers from one module to another to "add some SMALL :) feature".
    Yesterday you worked with module A, today you was switched to B (and you look at it for the first time) and after 3 days you will be switched to module C. It happens when author was switched to another "super important" task.
    If business logic is complex you put lot of effort to understand what the hell is going on. Finally, when you complete your task, you return to your main work and find out that someone modified your code and did it clumsy without understand all picture :) and the other guys of your team feel the same to your new features in their code.
    This carousel can make anyone angry.
    From my side I can add next tips:
    1) The most important: Leave your "private life" at home and "work life" at work. When you come out from your house you should leave all problems beside you house door (and the vise versa but for work-life). Your family and your boss/manager should know when and in what time they can contact with you.
    2) If you mix your private lifetime with work - it's a major and inevitable step to further burn out.
    3) If you work from home (and you can't be alone) you can try next trick: just before you start work change you cloth from "house shorts" to "my official garment in job place". For me it gives some subconscious feeling that situation changed and I'm not at home anymore :)
    4) Pomodoro technique is awesome. If you don't know what is that, you definitely should try it. I try lot of software and stopped at "Tomighty".
    That's all from my side.

    • @MonsterlessonsAcademy
      @MonsterlessonsAcademy  3 года назад

      Hi Sergey, thanks for a deep comment! I can totally feel your pain. I don't like working in startups exactly because of this problems that you wrote.
      And yes life/work balance is super important and a lot of people neglecting that.

  • @sergio_leone_
    @sergio_leone_ 3 года назад

    Alex, do you have any plans to make video on theme "How to find memory leak in JS (Angular) application?" :)

    • @MonsterlessonsAcademy
      @MonsterlessonsAcademy  3 года назад +2

      Didn't plan such video yet but thanks for the idea. I will add it in the list of future videos.

  • @aurangzaibbaloch8776
    @aurangzaibbaloch8776 10 месяцев назад

    You look like an Ai bot😂😂