If I could give advice to myself when starting as a software engineer

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  • Опубликовано: 15 июн 2022
  • Yes. If i could go back, what would I tell myself to be a better engineer. This is a heartfelt moment so please make sure you go to my twitch page and subscribe with your amazon twitch prime to show your sympathy.
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Комментарии • 742

  • @taylorallred6208
    @taylorallred6208 Год назад +858

    It’s amazing how life-changing it is to adopt a mindset where you can say “I don’t know that but I can learn it”.

    • @ratulsaha9487
      @ratulsaha9487 Год назад +23

      Its amazing because thats how I got into professional programming. Someone told me that they need a freelancer to do some React code for them. I literally had no idea but I took the job, learnt React and finished the job and got paid for it. The first time I used GoLang was in my current job and right now I am literally building a component of our software with it and I am like the only other person who knows GoLang here.

    • @morenojohnchristopherv.8894
      @morenojohnchristopherv.8894 11 месяцев назад +2

      Ill start using this quote on interviews.

    • @fuzzy-02
      @fuzzy-02 10 месяцев назад +8

      I always felt so alien whenever people ask me for something they can literally google.
      I google it and tell them and they be like wow you know everything?
      No, after taking philosphy classes in highschool I realized that I know that I dont know. But i know that i can know and so I google everything

    • @ratulsaha9487
      @ratulsaha9487 10 месяцев назад

      @@fuzzy-02 I lost 897 braincells reading that second para

    • @relly793
      @relly793 10 месяцев назад +3

      i couldnt imagine even living in a world where i never had this mindset.

  • @foofoo17
    @foofoo17 3 месяца назад +32

    "the more ways you see a problem solved, the more ways that you can solve that problem" - advice perfect for a software engineer and anyone in general.

  • @kevinvikan3609
    @kevinvikan3609 11 месяцев назад +399

    As someone who did struggle for 1 yеar to learn, I had to come here to say: the best way to learn are books that have interactive content. Those that make you practice what they teach on еach chapter.
    And that's what you need as a beginner: practice instead of complex subjects and concepts. Focus on learning your first programming language and evеrything else will be much easier once you learn.
    Edit: For those asking, the books that made me learn were "Javascript In Less Than 50 Pages" and "Head First Javascript Programming".

    • @some1and297
      @some1and297 10 месяцев назад +3

      I imagine this is good advice but books are for nerds and are so often super slow to get me to a place to be able to actually write things.

    • @MoonOvIce
      @MoonOvIce 10 месяцев назад +20

      @@some1and297 Books are for nerds? really? Are you from the 1980's?

    • @MoonOvIce
      @MoonOvIce 10 месяцев назад +8

      Yep, I found books waaay better than videos or even classes. I personally have a hard time retaining info coming from a human voice and I get easily distracted, but I can put ambience music and even incense if necessary and read a book and practice, I learn much better and much faster.

    • @tanishqsuryawanshi1276
      @tanishqsuryawanshi1276 9 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@some1and297yeah they are slow but it's worth the time, the depth you get through books, you simply cannot through videos given that the author is good, also the fact that it's way easier to revisit a concept immediately.

    • @msfklfl123
      @msfklfl123 8 месяцев назад

      @@MoonOvIce there are some concepts that's better explained in non-academic jargons. Some people can reflect on how they came to understand a certain topic, so it's easier for them to guid people to right approach ins seeing things than a rigid text. That's my 2 cents.

  • @Yutaro-Yoshii
    @Yutaro-Yoshii Год назад +106

    A difficult thing about programming is that once you find a set of things that works, it's really difficult to get yourself motivated to learn other things because you can basically do anything with them, albeit inefficiently. Turing completeness is both a bless and a curse.

    • @GoodByeSkyHarborLive
      @GoodByeSkyHarborLive 6 месяцев назад +3

      ​@@manny7662isn't that the opposite of what he is saying? To learn more.

    • @GoodByeSkyHarborLive
      @GoodByeSkyHarborLive 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@manny7662and how is python doing?

  • @mfdebian
    @mfdebian Год назад +137

    100% agreed, the whole "growth mindset" for me is basically fighting against the "inertia" we build up over the years. I think fighting the day-to-day inertia is one of the best things software developers can do for themselves. Also, be open to learn from people younger/newer int he business than you! Never close the door to learning!

  • @i4o
    @i4o Год назад +30

    You're absolutely right Prime. The times when I had great growth in my career and personal satisfaction were when I was getting out of my comfort zone and learning new things. I somehow lost it along the way but I'm finding my way back. Thank you for such great advice here and on Twitch!

  • @harrisoncramer
    @harrisoncramer Год назад +25

    This is such good advice. Especially at a time where it seems like everyone is saying that folks need to "specialize" in a particular domain, having the experience to have seen lots of different problems and lots of different solutions is so valuable: "The more ways you see a problem be solved, the more ways that you can solve a problem. We often are limited by our experiences."

  • @analisamelojete1966
    @analisamelojete1966 Год назад +1

    This is the message I needed. Your timing is amazing.
    Thank you!

  • @jakeshoemaker1483
    @jakeshoemaker1483 Год назад +12

    Appreciate the advice and wisdom. I’m still pretty junior (starting my second year professionally ) but started making the switch to neovim and i3. all my coworkers use Visual studio so it’s definitely hard at first but i know in the years to come i will be #blazingly better.

  • @alinagy
    @alinagy Год назад +24

    I'd been stuck for a very long time with the same tools and languages, it had become such a comfort zone for me, I literally used the exact same thing for every project because I had become too damn lazy to even think about improving; and then I noticed people around me had actually changed, I was still stuck as a damn ape with rocks and they'd invented the wheel already. I realized that I was a niche developer, I was only good for one thing and I was becoming less and less valuable as a developer each day.
    Ever since I started watching you though, I stepped out of that comfort zone, I now consistently set goals for myself and ACTUALLY complete them. I'm learning more and more tools, learning when, where and how to use them. Safe to say, I'm a better as a developer and as a person today than I was at the start of the year. Honestly dude, thank you.

  • @joshuaheathcote2116
    @joshuaheathcote2116 Год назад

    Bro, your truth as in individual is incredible. You're truly enlightened.

  • @binnyzf
    @binnyzf Год назад +2

    Great advice, I have been in that place in the first 2-3 years of my career, And abandoning this thinking process is what allowed me to actually progress much faster.

  • @ubercorey
    @ubercorey Год назад

    Another video about what didn't work for you in the past delivering extreme value for us.
    I struggle so hard with this and I am not a "top of the class" person at all. Its so helpful to see a high functioning professional grapple with this. Sometimes I feel like a mutant troll, a bundle of self righteousness and self doubt, and it zaps my will to keep forging forward in my path to get into tech.

  • @Jeff_Seely
    @Jeff_Seely 9 месяцев назад +1

    Failure just sucks! And it is there to invite itself when we really need to win. But we learn the most from our failures. I recollect my biggest failures like they were yesterday. Some of them still hurt but they work their ironic ways to make me better at what I do and I am thankful for them (I think). Great video!

  • @leonbenj
    @leonbenj Год назад

    Great video. This is the first video I have seen of you, and no matter your background, this applies to us all. Love this. I’m saving this to revisit this advice in the future.

  • @ChessFlix
    @ChessFlix Год назад +3

    It's really cool to see your channel blowing up. I learned vim in part from your videos over a year ago. You rock man.

  • @elramtv
    @elramtv 5 месяцев назад

    Hey man just watched this one, big fan here. I think that kind of over confidence has been a big part of my career and I have been eager to be uncomfortable as much as I can since I noticed a few years ago. Keep it real as always. Love ya.

  • @nikensss
    @nikensss Год назад +2

    Wow, I don't have a story of my own, but I think I started following your advice (that one you are giving out in this video) one year ago. I was always baffled that people would still use vim, until I started googling, found your youtube channel, and showed me that there's a very good reason why, haha.
    Now I do try to understand things a bit better, before jumping to the conclusion of "it doesn't make sense, my way is easier".
    It's good to hear it from you, though. Kind of a confirmation on a feeling I had. Thanks again!

  • @musashifanboy
    @musashifanboy Год назад +1

    I feel like i was in those years with you, thank you for this advice, comes at the right time

  • @slayah94
    @slayah94 Год назад +72

    Hey dude just discovered your channel and as a 28 year old guy that have just been programming for a couple of years(starting to get more serious now), and has struggled a lot in life with what i want to do/drugs/video games/etc. I really have to say that you've helped me a lot with my motivation and to find the strength i need to push through and keep grinding what can be a really tedious subject to master. I appreciate that a whole lot man so just wanted to let you know, peace

    • @kaigorodaki
      @kaigorodaki Год назад +8

      I would recommend to read a book by the name of: Atomic Habits, it'll help with life

    • @MrBnaan
      @MrBnaan 3 месяца назад

      I feel you bro. At a certain point you have to make the switch between the party & gaming life & real life. Such a hard transition ffs.. the hangover that lasts till Thursday ain’t helping the programming mind set 😂

  • @absencelul
    @absencelul Год назад +4

    Good video, this is a great lesson for things even outside of programming or work in general. I struggle with similar things and it can be easy to brush things off when they get difficult or just assume you know the "best" way.

  • @lerubikscubetherubikscube2813
    @lerubikscubetherubikscube2813 8 месяцев назад

    Loved that story, thanks for sharing.
    Writing my own code is super fun, but a feeling I get that is a hindrance to my motivation is that I KNOW someone out there has done it before, and it's probably better than anything I can come up with. I then need to remind myself that writing the code itself is an efficient way of learning new things.

  • @codecleric4972
    @codecleric4972 Год назад +8

    This is amazing and comes at the perfect time. I'm a self-taught developer with zero professional jobs in my background and I just accepted my first job as a software developer. You made me feel really good about where I'm at because I already really value the kind of problem-solving you speak of and I thrive on the Linux/vim/geeky ecosystem. I want to be the best developer I can be and I feel like having the beginner mind is so important for being your best and always pushing yourself.

    • @kevobuilds
      @kevobuilds Месяц назад

      love this, how long did it take you to land your job from starting out to learn? hope youre still advancing!!!

    • @codecleric4972
      @codecleric4972 Месяц назад

      @@kevobuilds so, it took me about 4 years from the time I started to learn til I got a job. In fairness I think I could've been ready sooner but I held myself back due to perfectionism. I think 2 years is realistic but I'm honestly glad I waited because my experience level did give me additional knowledge and confidence which was very valuable.
      At this point, I've held the job for almost 2 years and I'm doing well. I've thought of quitting and moving on a couple times but I'm staying for job security at least for now. The reason I would quit is my company hasn't had the best year financially and basically nobody in the company got a raise in the last year aside from cost of living, and generally speaking my company is a bit underpaid. I'm going to give them a bit more time but in the future I may move on to make more money when I can, market depending.
      But for now, I'm still happy to be making about 70k in a Midwest state with fairly low cost of living.

  • @raindev_
    @raindev_ Год назад +7

    Your interview story reminded me when a teacher asked to sort a list during a lab. I programmed selection sort in a few minutes and was sitting there with a smug face proud of myself. She said I should have used a library function instead.

  • @audreyschmitt4222
    @audreyschmitt4222 Год назад +1

    Love your videos. I'm about a month into my career in software development, and have always avoided the scary CLI in favor of fancy UI tools. Now that I'm out of school and in a professional environment, I'm seeing just how valuable it is to be exposed to these core utilities. Now off to check out vim! :)

  • @Archikuus
    @Archikuus Год назад

    Hi,
    Thank you so much for this content, I am a recent senior developer and sometimes I feel way in over my head. But its also put me into situations where I must learn and push myself. I am now 1 month into VIM and my coding speed, quality and quantity has increased multiple fold. So I can reflect myself in this video.

  • @TheStringBreaker
    @TheStringBreaker Год назад

    *Just discovered this channel and love it so much!* I’ve always been tangentially around code through high school(HTML, lil bit of Java) and college. I knew enough to understand it but held it in high regard. More so than mech e, which is what I went to college for.
    One thing I noticed after graduating is that the young coders have an err of arrogance about themselves. It’s a function(lol) of youth and I’m sure I’d be the same if I were in their shoes. But still annoying none the less.
    I started getting into *real* programming relatively late(23). And I’m glad I have the maturity to take a long term outlook on learning programming, and not blinded by the bravado the younger me would’ve had.

  • @fendularatsq2317
    @fendularatsq2317 Год назад

    Great advice, i hope a lot of people take it to heart.
    I made the transition from windows to linux about a year ago. Best thing i ever did. It made me learn so many things.
    The only excuse for not going to linux before was games but there is Proton now. I feel there should be a hash tag movement for making the switch now.

  • @quem_gabriel
    @quem_gabriel Год назад +28

    thanks for your tips. I'm from Brazil and I made a career transition. My wife and I created a plan where I could make this transition without harming the house's finances and this month I've been in the development area for three years and now the first jobs as a freelancer are starting to appear, it's not easy, but I always try to do what better and the right thing, one hour the return comes.

  • @carbondesigned
    @carbondesigned Год назад

    pog

  • @kugi7786
    @kugi7786 Год назад

    This was a very solid advice, thank you

  • @nicholascherry5962
    @nicholascherry5962 11 месяцев назад +1

    glad I actually learned sed and grep in my systems programming class. I really struggled w/ that course in college. Now I'm a server-side SWE I and alot of my work is in the terminal. I was thrilled to show my SME on day-1 that I can fly around the terminal. That really booster their confidence in me immediately.

  • @Paul-sv1lg
    @Paul-sv1lg Год назад

    Just found this channel from a recommendation from a friend and this is amazing, so much to learn and so helpful

  • @nimmero
    @nimmero Год назад

    Thank you for advice. I am just starting out (I work for 6 months as part time Software developer while studying at uni). I am starting to use VIM because of you (right now just extension for VS code to start easily) and it is hard, I turn it off many times when I am in hurry to do something for a meeting but I try to use it as much as possible. But I can see the huge potential for next years. It seems to me as a very good investment.

  • @slyose6154
    @slyose6154 Год назад

    Love to hear it from the experts. Thanks.

  • @sebkolind
    @sebkolind Год назад

    This is gold. It should be part of any book, course, readme, tiktok etc about learning to program.

  • @fishingtrippy
    @fishingtrippy 6 месяцев назад +1

    That is one thing I love about programming as a career as there is always something new to learn.

  • @adconde1
    @adconde1 Год назад

    Solid advice. Made me remember the time I was the crazy guy in the office who used i3 wm, thinking back I think I was much faster even tho it was difficult at first.

  • @chadelofson1637
    @chadelofson1637 Год назад +1

    I think that is where it is useful to start as an administrator. You learn the tools to administer the machines. For me it is now pivoting into Software Engineering, which has been a bit of a challenge. Mostly in convincing people to give me a shot.
    If I was to give myself advice it would be, build stuff no matter how imperfect it is.

  • @choicespecss
    @choicespecss Год назад

    Great content just stumbled across your channel! Definitely agree and enjoy your insight in the industry!

  • @jabiesorenson8271
    @jabiesorenson8271 4 месяца назад +2

    I’m the new kid on the block. Only 3 years in. I can’t tell you how crazy it is to here this articulated in this way. Because I myself am still slightly struggling with this concept. Example I got good at css because I didn’t want to dive into JavaScript. That part about being able to perceive the difficulty. Idk why but I danced around it until I stopped feeling challenged by css and so on with react etc. if you keep thinking about something you know you should or will need to learn “ one day “ I’ll lend you this.. what could be done today shouldn’t be left for tomorrow. If you want the next level. You gotta be ok with doing it uncomfortable.

  • @EyBossPusi
    @EyBossPusi 2 месяца назад

    Thank you so much for this!

  • @blubberdiblubb8558
    @blubberdiblubb8558 Год назад

    100% agree. What helped my was doing the internship-time with new interns. I am the trainer in our company and i train sw-development. The intern can choose the first language we are using to talk about software and to write software in. This helped opening my mind lots of times...

  • @tonyartz
    @tonyartz Год назад

    Amazing video! Subscribed, really helpful, you are just full of wisdom, keep it up! Love your videos, you are very inspiring, thank you so much ❤️

  • @benjamininman4874
    @benjamininman4874 8 месяцев назад

    I think this is great life advice, even for those of us who are not professional devs. I love your videos even though I am only an amateur in programmer using mostly python. I'm a lawyer so it can be hard to find time to learn how to use a new tool to do something that I can already do in Django.

  • @itzgabrieh4371
    @itzgabrieh4371 6 месяцев назад

    Love this video, I remember this year after I finished a 2 year technician degree on developing web apps I was doing a 3 months internship and I got too comfortable.. I wish I was at that time more proactive! Anyway now I am learning by my own React from 0..

  • @T1Oracle
    @T1Oracle 10 месяцев назад +6

    My experience was different. I started as a kid, I had no one to talk to about it. So I got any exposure, I soaked up everything I could. I hated reading other people's code and I would often rewrite things that I couldn't figure out. Most of that code was trash, but my code wasn't always great either. The thing is, the moment I learned something new, I wanted to upgrade everything old with it. I rewrote my first C++ game four times and never got past the intro screen.
    It took me years to realize that it's okay to let some things be sub-optimal. Bad code is going to exist, and if kept rewriting everything, nothing would get done.
    I still hate reading other people's code, but I'm getting better at that too. Just don't ask me to read Perl.

  • @SimoneScanzoni
    @SimoneScanzoni Год назад

    I've always had that mindset, maybe too much, trying very different things in my life and never excelling, but I learned a lot and had fun learning.
    One thing that I think people should try as soon as possible is a saner keyboard layout like dvorak or colemak (I use dvorak). Common layouts are the legacy of mechanical typewriters that had problems when pressing adjacent buttons, they easily got stuck, so the letters are positioned to make you travel more when you type and that's insane today

  • @LucienBill
    @LucienBill 3 месяца назад

    Thanks!
    When I was younger I had a bit of an ego problem, I believed I knew better. Luckily I failed really hard at some important school exam, and thought "yeah, that's on me. It's time to do something about it".
    Today, whenever I offer my take or something, I regularly add "don't forget: I'm just a persons with biases and misconceptions. I could be completely wrong, don't trust anything I say if it hasn't been tested". I also ask "why" and "how" a lot: understanding for real has value me, while "not looking too dumb (by avoiding asking stupid questions)" isn't something I'm interested in.
    So far I'm happy with the results.

  • @bacacho123
    @bacacho123 Год назад

    Thanks! I've been searching how to get it and this is brilliant :D

  • @jacksparr0w300
    @jacksparr0w300 Год назад +1

    I thought it was awesome you mentioned learning relative technologies. In college I would read multiple different math books on a topic. I found that authors had different angles of perspective that helped me understand it material faster..

  • @lewcreative
    @lewcreative Год назад +1

    shit....I have the same mindset. Thanks for the advice man. That mind set shift can change your whole trajectory in life and work.

    • @ThePrimeagen
      @ThePrimeagen  Год назад

      it really can :) ty for the note bud

  • @ByornJohn
    @ByornJohn 9 месяцев назад

    Awesome words ! Totally agree .

  • @tedlava
    @tedlava 6 месяцев назад

    I tutor CS students online. I often tell my students what makes good programmers "good", is that they have already made those mistakes, possibly even numerous times, that they know how to avoid them or know what to look for to fix those bugs quicker...
    Love the channel! Thank you for the great content!

  • @thirdstreetnorth
    @thirdstreetnorth 2 месяца назад

    thanks for that, appreciate your insights.

  • @akmoudgil
    @akmoudgil Год назад +1

    LONG TERM DIVIDEND PLAY : Words of wisdom heard clearly and noted down. Thanks Primeagen!

  • @BMAN4888
    @BMAN4888 Год назад

    Graduated 5 years ago, and finally got my first programming position in January 2022. Love your content, working with Visual Studio, VSCode, Angular 5, C#, Kendo UI, Azure, and SCSS so far. Any content on Angular would be amazing, keep up the good work! Blazingly Fast! lmao

    • @ThePrimeagen
      @ThePrimeagen  Год назад

      Thank you, this is blazingly appreciated. I probably won't do much on that stack. Sorry

  • @marioandresheviacavieres1923
    @marioandresheviacavieres1923 Год назад

    Great advice, I appreciate it :)!

  • @springbreak2021
    @springbreak2021 2 месяца назад

    Not a programmer, and I’m 27 so I really don’t know anything and this process is ongoing - but I used to be very hard on myself when I had experiences that reminded me how little I know. I would kind of rush back to my bubble of ignorance and try to take some confidence. I was often very prideful and kind of fragile, and I would rather fake looking like I knew something before I accepted that I didn’t. It took me a long time to realize, and I still sometimes have to remind myself, but it’s okay to not know everything. It’s okay to be in a meeting and not know something and then go figure it out, even if you prepared and should’ve known it. It’s okay to pick up new things and suck for a while, as long as you have goals lined out. It’s much better for your mind to accept this and then choose to do the difficult task of learning than to be scared that you might miss something and never put in the work to learn it. Failing is really not as bad as I thought it was, except for when I gave up and didn’t try to learn where I went wrong.
    Keep going boys and know that I support you in your endeavors, as long as they build you up💪

  • @jR-tm3ko
    @jR-tm3ko Год назад +1

    great video as always, thank you

  • @technewera6074
    @technewera6074 Год назад

    My favorite video of the year, you even deserved a suscription.

  • @aes0p895
    @aes0p895 6 месяцев назад +1

    interesting timing. just decided yesterday to finally 'really learn' bash and vim.

  • @highmastdon
    @highmastdon Год назад

    After nearly 2 decades of experience, the main lesson I've learned is to expand your horizon. Not just change one framework for the other (react v svelte/solid/vue), or one tool for the other (vscode v emacs/vim/...), but to understand that there are realms that you've never touched before, that might be orders of magnitude more powerful to solve your problem.
    As an engineer coming from backend, into frontend, into blockchain, into compilers/ASTs/parsers, into AI, that's where the magic lies, the expansion of knowledge of problem areas. It's like understanding the different type of solution that exists between Constraint Solvers and AI. Or map-reduce frameworks and bash-scripting. Or programming a complex tool vs building a DSL specific to that problem.
    One web-framework and the next web-framework solve the same problem, just in a different way. Know that there are different ways to fix rendering components, but more so, know that there are problem areas with their own solutions you've never even touched upon. Think of it as "adjacent possible", combine everything you know, and then go outside that, to a problem/solution realm that's really new to you.

  • @deivitsalazar1991
    @deivitsalazar1991 Год назад +1

    This guy is heaven sent

  • @griet535
    @griet535 Год назад

    This is pretty good advice. I learned rust in my free time and it helped me to become a good programmer regardless of the language I use.

  • @PatAtomich
    @PatAtomich 27 дней назад

    Sup buddy,
    I been liking your vids for awhile; been coding since Senior year of highschool and graduated from College like 4 days ago.
    I am trying to do everything you say, even though sometimes I feel discouraged about the actual use cases.
    I am currently learning the syntax for ruby, similar to python but not, and I feel like it is a waste of time.
    I just know once I get to learning rails it will allow me to expand my range of stacks and that will be hype.
    I am going to build a Chess computer with Ruby on the backend and I am excited to get into that.
    I have had emacs installed on my computer for like a year, I may actually use it because you said I should.
    keep on posting buddy cause I will keep watching, love your content, and I cant wait to get a role in the field.

  • @chachan4142
    @chachan4142 Год назад +2

    Not just the best programming advice, but THE best advice--PERIODT. Be openminded and willing to play the long game. Thank you for this great video!

  • @michalroesler
    @michalroesler 10 месяцев назад

    years of wisdom delivered blazingly fast.

  • @tranquiltastes
    @tranquiltastes Год назад

    Blazingly cool! Thank you!

  • @chrisrockscode1202
    @chrisrockscode1202 11 месяцев назад

    Love it, I’ve been there bouncing around OSes, distro hopping, but trying to hone in on expertises to just not end up like some soy dev… I did a lil vim in my assembly class, but next hitting neovim!

  • @defyusall
    @defyusall Год назад +1

    Words to live by. Yet again another great vid 👍

  • @light6034
    @light6034 Год назад

    Thank you, it works perfect!

  • @alirezaalavi1504
    @alirezaalavi1504 Год назад

    Man I love your videos

  • @mahdiaghaei8154
    @mahdiaghaei8154 Год назад +1

    1-2 years ago I (as non-cs student who just started programming) forced myself to use ubuntu, IT WAS HARD, but now I am comforable at using cli and I just love it

  • @abv-gn2gk
    @abv-gn2gk 2 месяца назад

    Thank you for the video,
    the absence of irrational intolerance based on "prejudices", treating technologies just as a tools based on their efficiency with no bias, being free - these are my thoughts

  • @ChillAutos
    @ChillAutos Год назад

    I needed to hear this.

  • @rahem8004
    @rahem8004 Год назад +4

    this is so true, I started using vim when I discovered this channel, and I'm still having a hard time with it, but as you said: "it is ok to be uncomfortable"

  • @bubbaguppylive
    @bubbaguppylive Год назад

    I'm a recent high school graduate going on to my first year of college and this is actually really good advice. It's just the kick I needed to start trying different IDEs and put some time into exploring Linux. I've been thinking about dual booting and I started dual booting recently. I haven't regretted it since and I've been obsessed with ricing my system. But I wouldn't have even tried Linux if it wasn't for the fellowship I'm currently in that pushed me. I think I've been feeling the same way about VSCode and React but after this video, maybe I could explore other IDEs, text editors, and frameworks. I've heard from a lot of people that Create React App is cringe so I've been trying to avoid it but I also didn't wanna learn anything new lol

  • @cd-stephen
    @cd-stephen Год назад

    inspirational - thank you for taking the time

  • @Tazato
    @Tazato Год назад

    knowing how to pipe input and output places, knowing basic sql, being comfortable reading and writing kubernetes yaml files, being able to monitor and alert your own stuff, testing testing testing . . . There are so many things that go into making a good software engineer great that is not strictly code writing ability.

  • @kates.creates
    @kates.creates 3 месяца назад

    that is some good advice. i needed that

  • @malobaidan
    @malobaidan Год назад

    "we are limited by our experience" damn that is deep and true

  • @vamp1r548
    @vamp1r548 Год назад +1

    "seeing things done differently" thats how i calm myself when have to work with deprecated stuff

  • @logeshwaran3016
    @logeshwaran3016 Год назад

    Bro just thought me how to be a software engineer in 5.55 minutes . I been searching for this motivation for the past 14 days cause my mental barrier stops me to explore other backend expect Node . Thanks U just motivated me to god level respect++

  • @iMakeYoutubeConfused
    @iMakeYoutubeConfused Год назад

    This is a great piece of advice.

  • @RayAndrewsDev
    @RayAndrewsDev 9 месяцев назад

    Such good advice, thank you !
    Me, years ago deep in PHP : Maybe I should give that "stupid" typescript thing a look

  • @uchejordy3255
    @uchejordy3255 4 месяца назад

    Thank you Prime

  • @denzilv
    @denzilv Год назад

    Louder in the back!
    How are we always in sync? It's crazy!

  • @aseyza_
    @aseyza_ Год назад

    Makes me feel better about spending a lot of my time in my bootcamp setting up dotfiles, learning vin and emacs

  • @n0kodoko143
    @n0kodoko143 Год назад

    This is a reminder to work on the things that I suck at (and there are a lot), but namely working in a group/team. I need to get better at that.

  • @joshwootonn6575
    @joshwootonn6575 Год назад

    I'm 4 years into fulltime programming, which means a lot of the basic advice on the internet isn't novel anymore, but this video is really helpful. Learning vim because of Prime right now :)

    • @dibri
      @dibri Год назад

      Would you mind giving me a referral for a new grad position

  • @jabr0nicus
    @jabr0nicus 6 месяцев назад

    Interesting video! My road to comp sci was very different from yours but i have similar problems (altho for different reasons). I've certainly never had the experience of being smarter than my classmates or succeeding early lol

  • @datasciyinfo5133
    @datasciyinfo5133 Год назад

    Thanks for your video. To me it says make the long term investment to improve in large blocks and trade off immediately comfort and productivity. Also be willing to learn from other people and when many of them recommend something, I should try it out for a while before shutting it down. I have been studying python deep learning for 4 years. Hopefully this year I can land a job using those skills.

  • @Richard-sp3ul
    @Richard-sp3ul Год назад +1

    Awesome advice. Your content has blown my fragile little minds to bits. Great work.

  • @lonebrowvg5219
    @lonebrowvg5219 Год назад

    thanks :) more of this would be appreciated

  • @amit-mishra
    @amit-mishra 9 месяцев назад

    I was always highly curious person have started with nano, gedit and learnt around six months later after getting started with python through online compilers(by learn and code type tutorials) and c by a book which compiled through gcc. I remember when I first heard the term IDE, I was confused where does it fits the equation from code to compiler? I used to write in a arbitrary text editor, save the file, compile it, execute it.
    I have used vscode(mostly prefer it with javascript(web development) and python), kate(prefers to use it still for c++ codebases), vim (used it enough then left it mostly because this is the time I was learning clean code etc. etc. and it was adding additional complexities over it.) i mainly don't like vscode because how much heavy it goes on ram (electron... you know it) by just launching it.

  • @jeefuji
    @jeefuji 11 месяцев назад

    Spitting facts. Do not refuse sane challenges, even if you don't know how to do it, because you will always grow from it one way or another.
    Accept that you don't know everything, and strive to learn more along the road with eyes unclouded.
    Transgress dogmas if you understand why you are doing it.

  • @mqix3741
    @mqix3741 Год назад +1

    Thank you for this advice im going to use nvim and linux instead of vscode and windows this summer, also you are very fun to watch i started this school year a software developer degree in college and they dont teach all of this important skills you talk about, i make huge progress becase it became my hobby

    • @ThePrimeagen
      @ThePrimeagen  Год назад

      that is great to hear :)
      keep on pushing your bounds

  • @zuccca
    @zuccca 5 месяцев назад

    This channel is pure gold. Thank you for the sound advice 👏 Do you offer any kind of interview prep coaching? In the process of trying to get into FAANG and it's been brutal.

  • @alexIVMKD
    @alexIVMKD Год назад +1

    It makes sense, it's all about experience at the end of the day.
    Leaving an idea for a video: hot take on specializations