I totally understand you. In fact when i were working we are officially needed to be trained. But due to schedule the training always started at least 6 months if not 1 year late. We just have to learn that from the job. There is no internet then. That is the hard part. But head first sometimes is good.
im 1 year into python now, finally it feels like i can speak it like native language and understand the more advanced concepts, do not fool youself into thinking you know, as you dont know what you dont know! ( i learn this every month i keep coding! ) if you are starting out, learn the fundamentals of python, for example, ( create a program that will add two numbers, you could go further to write this to a list or dictionary and save it to a txt or json file, then read the data, then maybe you move onto learning loops, then you can understand how the code will begin to work and you can start using functions and class's to make your code more readable/ functional. then you maybe move onto learning different modules, etc... do no overwhealm yourself! start simple and learn the basics my friends! follow a simple tutorial that will teach you how the system works, not how to make the system! good luck and keep at it!
I was forced to learn a lot of the concepts of Python for a technical evaluation project. Hadn't ever really used it before and for the position they expected me to be able to work with it. It took me most of the week that they gave me for a timeline but I got it done and it actually looked pretty good.
You cannot really code when you can create a simple web scraper in python. You merely got the basics of how to perform certain actions in a scripting language. The real challenge of coding is the way you think, understanding data structures, working object based etc. But you gotta start somewhere, and this is indeed a great way to start
I totally agree, 24 hours wont make you a seasoned coder. Thinking about it, I think a lot of the time it’s getting stuck in tutorial-hell for months and that short deadline just helped me to just do it myself. Thanks for watching!
"so you know how to create a list, but the real question is why should you create a list." this right here.
really inspiring. I agree with tutorials not teaching why things are done, instead just do things and you connect the dots
I totally understand you. In fact when i were working we are officially needed to be trained. But due to schedule the training always started at least 6 months if not 1 year late. We just have to learn that from the job. There is no internet then. That is the hard part. But head first sometimes is good.
im 1 year into python now, finally it feels like i can speak it like native language and understand the more advanced concepts, do not fool youself into thinking you know, as you dont know what you dont know! ( i learn this every month i keep coding! ) if you are starting out, learn the fundamentals of python, for example, ( create a program that will add two numbers, you could go further to write this to a list or dictionary and save it to a txt or json file, then read the data, then maybe you move onto learning loops, then you can understand how the code will begin to work and you can start using functions and class's to make your code more readable/ functional. then you maybe move onto learning different modules, etc... do no overwhealm yourself! start simple and learn the basics my friends! follow a simple tutorial that will teach you how the system works, not how to make the system! good luck and keep at it!
I was forced to learn a lot of the concepts of Python for a technical evaluation project. Hadn't ever really used it before and for the position they expected me to be able to work with it. It took me most of the week that they gave me for a timeline but I got it done and it actually looked pretty good.
You cannot really code when you can create a simple web scraper in python. You merely got the basics of how to perform certain actions in a scripting language. The real challenge of coding is the way you think, understanding data structures, working object based etc. But you gotta start somewhere, and this is indeed a great way to start
I totally agree, 24 hours wont make you a seasoned coder. Thinking about it, I think a lot of the time it’s getting stuck in tutorial-hell for months and that short deadline just helped me to just do it myself. Thanks for watching!
Great video. Love to see facts on how to actually improve.
What app do people code on?
Why didn't you ask chatGPT?
😊😊😊😊😊 0:07 ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
smart girl