How to ACTUALLY LEARN using programming tutorials!

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  • Опубликовано: 8 июл 2024
  • For those who are looking to teach themselves software development, you are going to have to use learning resources. The most popular approach to learning right now are tutorials in the form of video courses/books. There is an abundance of resources to choose from right now and the question really comes down to: how do you get the most out of programming tutorials? In this video I'll give you some insight into how people use tutorials the right away and avoid some of the issues that others have had.
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Комментарии • 178

  • @AndySterkowitz
    @AndySterkowitz  5 лет назад +65

    Have you been having issues with learning from tutorials? Did this video help you in any way?

    • @BraxtonMeyer
      @BraxtonMeyer 5 лет назад +5

      No one signed a treaty on December 1st, 1895 so I don't know what you're on aboot there bloke.

    • @AndySterkowitz
      @AndySterkowitz  5 лет назад

      Braxton Meyer lolol

    • @baileyburnsed4352
      @baileyburnsed4352 5 лет назад +1

      yes, it did. I am also self-taught and I am currently taking a submitter off, the fall, I hate my experience with collage so fare. Forchetly I am not in debt and this is so encouraging, I do software development and game dev as a hobby, and I actually learned more about Computer Science by reading the Open Source Textbooks from the OpenTextbook library, GA tech, and I've Lege school contribute to and use these books.

    • @gingja
      @gingja 5 лет назад +3

      Been following your channel for a few months now and I went to college and got a degree and couldn't really find a job because the degree was learning several different languages but never specializing.
      That being said, I've been doing a lot of tutorials and watching a lot of your videos got me to realize I needed to pick something to specialize in and have a purpose. Once I get a job in what I'm currently specializing in I can work on other programming skills in my free time.
      You've been great and I appreciate these videos immensely!

    • @crossfire112278
      @crossfire112278 5 лет назад

      It is funny. With some of your tips, it is like you have a camera watching me and just have to say, do not be this guy. I have most of the no-no's checked: tutorial purgatory, not finishing the tutorial, overwhelming myself with trying to learn everything and then ending up learning nothing. I think I have gotten to the point where I have tried to cram so many different languages into my head, I could not write a Hello World program in any of them now to save my life. My problem is wanting to change careers so bad, I try to learn everything so I can get any job. Now, I cannot get any job. Lesson here, do not be this guy.

  • @slimyelow
    @slimyelow 3 года назад +16

    Making wheeny tiny side projects on a single topic (they don't have to look pretty) cements your mastery; you literally own that skill!

  • @chrissampson7569
    @chrissampson7569 5 лет назад +61

    The examples in this video describe me accurately. When I discovered Udemy, I was like "Oh wow! So many video courses on what I want to learn! Only $9.99 from $199 but for only 3 days! I better jump on that!" In less than a year, I accumulated over 100 Udemy courses, started most, and completed 2. I got sucked into Udemy's mastermind marketing and accomplished nothing but wasted money and valuable time. I have since learned my lesson.
    I've found that once I get the basics out of the way, everything else is just reference. I think about what I want to create, lay the basic foundation, then find resources to help me accomplish what I'm trying to achieve at certain points in my project. For me, this approach is a lot more productive and I learn intermediate and advanced concepts faster because I apply them to my own projects and learn what works best or doesn't work at all, which is 100x better than trying to complete 20+ hour Udemy courses that get me nowhere.

    • @matheusrocha78
      @matheusrocha78 4 года назад

      @@nizamahmed5607 yeah, I think so

    • @edb484
      @edb484 4 года назад +1

      nizam ahmed Exactly, I’m just learning myself. But I’ve talked to a few software engineers and they both told me they keep Google tab up lol. Both of these make over 100k

    • @DevOtionSynthax
      @DevOtionSynthax 4 года назад +2

      nizam ahmed - it’s not just “Googling stuff”, you have to know what you’re looking for. Understanding the basics helps you a lot. You can Google all you want but if you don’t have a basic understanding of the language it serves you no purpose.

    • @thienle8979
      @thienle8979 4 года назад +1

      If you have 100 courses, share the accounts

  • @vidaliseghohimen6660
    @vidaliseghohimen6660 5 лет назад +44

    It’s crazy how helpful this video was for me. Especially the part about making sure that I know the specific purpose of why I’m using a tutorial and getting the most out of it because I’m the type of person who will absolutely cram everything and forget half of it. Thanks for this.

    • @AndySterkowitz
      @AndySterkowitz  5 лет назад +10

      Excellent to hear! Yeah I have made that mistake many times as well. I'll end up choosing a tutorial randomly because it sounded like something I needed. But since I didn't have any real use for it, the content went in one ear and out there other. Cheers Vidal!

  • @mypassportpicsux
    @mypassportpicsux 5 лет назад +20

    Your advice is spot on.
    The only way to solidify what you’ve learned is to build. It’s like you can’t be fearful of the pitfalls and walls you’ll hit along the way because that’s what makes you a good programmer/developer.
    The desire to build is organic. It’s that little voice nagging you telling you “this tutorial is great but...”.

  • @TinyMaths
    @TinyMaths 5 лет назад +11

    I like your Matrix analogy. If only learning was that quick and easy eh? I spent the first year of college wondering why the hell I wasn't able to retain the stuff I was learning in lectures. I felt like I was not learning anything, until I realized that there's this moment when I hear a concept in class, and think " yeah, I understand that ", but then month later I had completely forgotten how the concept worked and had to go back into my notes and study them 'all over again', otherwise I couldn't even complete assignments that had questions involving the concept.
    Cramming might be an option for people who have not studied for upcoming exams but I feel that you don't really understand a subject on a practical level until, on some level, you've taken it apart, worked lots of examples, including ones which are beyond your skill level, made mistakes, got into a rut, learned how to fix what you broke, understood your mistakes etc. After repeating this many times over at that point you begin having a good 'understanding' of the thing, and you can add it to your problem solving/item building toolkit.

  • @mpsniper9316
    @mpsniper9316 5 лет назад +5

    This video was needed
    Very helpful.
    Thank you

  • @artdirectorgiraffe1003
    @artdirectorgiraffe1003 Год назад

    Thank you, ive always thought about, what i should be doing while learning from a tutorial and this gives me a good concise idea on what to do! Great info.

  • @MissLysreign
    @MissLysreign 4 года назад

    I love the idea of keeping a running tab of things you don’t know. Thank you for that! It helps you to not be stagnant when something gets hard.

  • @rodneytheredmage3436
    @rodneytheredmage3436 5 лет назад +15

    This man knows what he's talking about! Avoid! Tutorial! Purgatory! That outro was dope!!!!

  • @Pathrissia
    @Pathrissia 4 года назад

    Right on! Amazing Andy!

  • @codingmorrison7957
    @codingmorrison7957 5 лет назад

    Well done Andy! I really like how you broke down how to get the most out of tutorials in this video!

  • @MisterMisf1t
    @MisterMisf1t 4 года назад

    Your tips are pretty genuine and amazing. Cheers!

  • @Conceptsexplainedsimply
    @Conceptsexplainedsimply 5 лет назад

    I really adore you and your content, Andy. I'm breaking into the field right now as a full stack developer and am now beginning to go down the path of learning React. This type of stuff is really helpful to me, because you hit points that people actually need to hear. I'm really stoked about the life-long learning aspect of programming and that's ultimately what drew me into the field in the first place. I'm so in love with the ability to be able to go on any computer and utilizing my brain to create things. It's so much nicer than having to go back to construction and wear my body down.

  • @kickatorch9151
    @kickatorch9151 4 года назад

    Keep doing what you do, its so helpful for startups

  • @lefxxwill7740
    @lefxxwill7740 3 года назад

    such good advice! It seems straight forward but somehow I really needed this guidance on how to learn from tutorials

  • @ifracing
    @ifracing 2 года назад

    Awesome video, i feel like i was always passive, thinking yes im learning, but this makes 100% sense! Now my learning is getting better, im now watching tutorials and at the same time writing down the code and also finding out what each individual word on c++ is meant for. Thank you

  • @cornellmihkail1238
    @cornellmihkail1238 4 года назад +1

    It's 13 minutes of everything I need to know. God bless you Andy!

  • @markshinoda1028
    @markshinoda1028 5 лет назад +6

    Thank you a lot on this. This is exactly what I needed, how to use them.

  • @elpalako
    @elpalako 5 лет назад

    Andy... Sometimes I think you make videos just for me! I'm learning programming now and it seems you know that I'm doing it! Thank you 🙂

  • @ignacioa3698
    @ignacioa3698 3 года назад

    Great input!

  • @avanishsrivastav2392
    @avanishsrivastav2392 4 года назад

    He's saying what we are/were going through and that's so true
    Nice work Andy

  • @praveenb9048
    @praveenb9048 4 года назад +1

    Google up --> understand --> *_implement_* --> forget --> repeat.
    Gradually, stuff that you need more often, sticks in the memory. Stuff that you don't need often, just re-Google it whenever required.

  • @Anonymous_starrrr
    @Anonymous_starrrr 3 года назад

    U are talking about really important topics! Thanks :)

  • @devyankapoor9091
    @devyankapoor9091 4 года назад

    Hi Andy!
    Its awesome content. Liked it:)

  • @gilgene5803
    @gilgene5803 5 лет назад +1

    Andy, this topic really speaks home I use a lot of tutorials. I normally just take a lot of notes. in other to kind of bookmark my memory.

  • @andrewelefanio6035
    @andrewelefanio6035 5 лет назад +2

    Thank you Andy! This is very helpful.

  • @slimyelow
    @slimyelow 3 года назад +2

    Added 'coding-along' practice doubles your chances of retaining stuff.

  • @jasonhumphrey2464
    @jasonhumphrey2464 5 лет назад +2

    Really great video Andy!

  • @Yup712
    @Yup712 5 лет назад +1

    Thanks! Another great video! I was having trouble with the title attribute the other day and I finally got up, took a break, and when I sat back down, not only did I figure out why the title attribute wasn’t working for me, but how to properly implement most attributes with elements finally clicked for me! I made some very simple pages to practice it and it really helped me retain what I’ve been learning and solve problems I run into when trying to code with what I’ve learned.

  • @adenijiakintunde6620
    @adenijiakintunde6620 3 года назад

    thank you andy

  • @mkvc111
    @mkvc111 5 лет назад +2

    Thank you Andy, it is solid advice.

  • @devgarg7469
    @devgarg7469 2 года назад

    Very helpful

  • @UteChewb
    @UteChewb 3 года назад

    Good advice. I've been out of the programming env for awhile and am getting back into it for fun. But I wholeheartedly agree with your strategy. I also found that the best thing, for me, was to have a small project that motivates you at the start of the tutorials and that you can use to apply the knowledge to. There will likely be hard parts to it, but that's good because it will force you to understand the technology much more deeply, which is the whole point.

  • @JousefM
    @JousefM 5 лет назад +1

    Nice tips! :)

  • @tina360
    @tina360 3 года назад

    I am so happy youtube recommend me your channel

  • @slimyelow
    @slimyelow 3 года назад +1

    This is an amazing channel. And I am a lardass at just figuring this out now.

  • @bethshebaovercame9580
    @bethshebaovercame9580 4 года назад

    You are such a blessing.

  • @ieatyoursushi7655
    @ieatyoursushi7655 2 года назад

    the taking action part is the most accurate

  • @GorillaDev417
    @GorillaDev417 4 года назад

    About to deep dive into some tutorials tomorrow to prep for a project we’re starting Monday at work. Will be getting down on some fundamental level state machines, litelement, webdriverio, and typescript.

  • @zealousprogrammer4539
    @zealousprogrammer4539 4 года назад +2

    I use to tend to quit when I find a bug, even lastly I start over from scratch then figure it out.

  • @dianejones8298
    @dianejones8298 5 лет назад +1

    Awesome advice. This video illustrates how unique I am not. I have been experiencing several road blocks you have mentioned in this and other videos; and am realizing my experience is not unique and others have encountered the same issues.
    Definitely need to get a mentor.
    I am glad for you and other RUclipsrs who put out this type of content. So helpful.

    • @AndySterkowitz
      @AndySterkowitz  5 лет назад +1

      This issue is so common. Figuring out how to navigate through it is what separates those who succeed and those who end up giving up. Glad to hear this was helpful!

  • @pratikthorat3480
    @pratikthorat3480 4 года назад

    i just started learning web technologies! i learnt html and recently started with css! before taking tutorials i watched youtube videos and saw these amazing people made these animations simple! then i tried making my own animations and i failed!
    i watched your video and i got to know my mistakes! And now i am able to design stuff (to some extent). Thank You so much Sir!

  • @khalidmohammad5103
    @khalidmohammad5103 5 лет назад +4

    Now I should...
    1- Start my code editor/IDLE and take Actions (stop being passive).
    2- Avoid cramming with the tutorials .
    3- Get out of the rabbit hole.

  • @isholaolatunde2391
    @isholaolatunde2391 5 лет назад +1

    Thank you... very helpful

  • @abdulsalamjamaeazidane5481
    @abdulsalamjamaeazidane5481 5 лет назад

    Andy i wanna ask you when i have done from course should i read the documentation about the thing that i have learnt

  • @_Hadda
    @_Hadda 2 года назад

    I find that the best way I learned was to oversaturate myself on the basics. For 3 months I would go through many courses,(Finish them all!). I would take notes by creating a web page as I learned, and I would put the notes there. I would create examples of the concepts I learned as well. This reinforced what I was learning. Then when 3months were over, I stopped all tutorials and just started building. Most tutorials are the same, you don't need more than 3 months. Build as much and as fast as you can without tutorials(google what you need!), this is where you actually learn stuff. Always remember, Tutorials are not a path to a job, they are just starting points.

  • @slimyelow
    @slimyelow 3 года назад +1

    On point: Tutorials are each a puzzle piece. Gather many and you will soon see the bigger picture.

  • @ccarter2468
    @ccarter2468 4 года назад +1

    Don't be passive, wow such simple advice that I admittedly was overlooking. Foolishly, at first I was just observing and trying to suck in the information, but I found as I went through and typed out the code in Pycharms along the way it was helping more. Simple, not complex concept, great. However, hearing you codify it the way you did with the tennis analogy was spot on and helped cement that behavior for me.
    Thanks for the gem!

    • @AndySterkowitz
      @AndySterkowitz  4 года назад

      It’s an easy trap to fall into. The way most of us have been taught to learn is to try to understand concepts. Programming is different in that you need to actually demonstrate that you can use those concepts on a real world setting. So glad to hear it helped!!

  • @glengub
    @glengub 5 лет назад +6

    Where is that one dude that will summarize a video with an unordered list? We need you. 💀

  • @haraldcarlsten6238
    @haraldcarlsten6238 5 лет назад +1

    Great video! Very motivating!

  • @GlidingScorpion
    @GlidingScorpion 3 года назад

    You earned yourself a sub !

  • @slimyelow
    @slimyelow 3 года назад +1

    Great point: If bored, switch to new topic asap.

  • @dexter64270
    @dexter64270 5 лет назад +2

    Thanks for making this video. I have been taking notes after tutorials and it was interesting to hear that you recommend note taking!

  • @teimoorbahrami8634
    @teimoorbahrami8634 3 года назад

    when i want to create my own project for example in python, i don't know what should i do. if i were to create a snake game i don't know what steps should i take to create it. should i just look an example code or try to do my own?

  • @gurukiran4567
    @gurukiran4567 5 лет назад +1

    Woaah you just read my mind!!

  • @MichaelWilson-gq8ud
    @MichaelWilson-gq8ud 5 лет назад

    I agree with taking notes. I currently go through some Code Cademy to get fundamentals of languages. I take decent notes and it helps to read over them along the way. It's a very bad idea to try to work on a tutorial for 8 hours. Best thing I've heard is to push yourself. That could be by doing other people's exercises or better yet, your own. If you can design your own program and code it you'll learn so much.

  • @MrJuego-pj9no
    @MrJuego-pj9no 3 года назад

    Finally found a perfect advice for a beginner.

  • @nataliadabrowsk3819
    @nataliadabrowsk3819 4 года назад

    Can you cover the subject of order at which the program is executed ?
    Great video Thank you.

  • @Ctrl_Alt_Elite
    @Ctrl_Alt_Elite 3 года назад +1

    This is a brilliant video, wish I found this a year ago 😂 related to a lot of it 🤦🏽‍♂️

  • @bhavsarvrajendra341
    @bhavsarvrajendra341 4 года назад

    Is there any appropriate way of taking notes while learning to code , because sometimes it becomes like theoretical concept that I'll going to cram.. instead gaining practical knowledge ... Which I'll forget and will have to repeat that basic concept.

  • @harpalsinhjadeja2568
    @harpalsinhjadeja2568 5 лет назад +2

    you read my mind seriously

  • @darrylcalder
    @darrylcalder 4 года назад

    I am attempting to mash together someone's nav bar with another persons drop down. All my javascript lessons are 'hey heres how to map something' or 'lets look for x in this array'. I am unable to translate the functions of a web page into this tutorial logic. Related to this, I cant figure out the demarcation where I need to alter things with CSS (hover, mouseclick) vs creating query selector functions in javascript.

  • @ramonmaximiliano3557
    @ramonmaximiliano3557 4 года назад

    one of the few videos where the guy is actually giving some meaningful advice about this

  • @SkandanKA
    @SkandanKA 4 года назад

    This is so cool!
    Thanks for pointing out the hidden thief inside us!

  • @shortty7618
    @shortty7618 4 года назад

    I’ve been working through a tutorial and building a project website on the side while going through it.
    After I get through a section, I’ll start using what I learned on my project, and I retain the information so much better.
    About a year ago I tried to learn to code, but gave up at intermediate CSS lmao. I had no drive. No determination. No grit.
    Anyways, I’m learning Bootstrap now, then Javascript! Can’t wait to have my website doing cool things!

  • @dianamarce115
    @dianamarce115 4 года назад

    Everything great. Now, any tutorial series you can recommend?

  • @Detonat0r
    @Detonat0r 5 лет назад

    As electrical engineering student I had my first experience with programming almost 9 years ago with C++. After long time I started to study on my own. I watched two tutorials. One from udeny and one from free code camp. I keept notes and then I started to make my own simple programs. I repeat: simple, in order to understand what I was tought from tutorials. Although there are things that I haven't understand until now, Like setters, getters, pointers and others. I do it as hobby and I like it. A friend gave a book of C and I read it because it has a lot of similarities with C++. I believe that a book is much better source of knowledge because of the many examples. Soon I will buy another one for c++. My plan for the next months is to learn the basics and then maybe I will go for python which looks more "modern".
    Don't forget: don't be hurry, be patient , keep notes and take actions.

  • @dzi6278
    @dzi6278 3 года назад

    I usually get stuck with the very beginning, configuring environment. I do everything as in tutorial, but the result is Eclipse does not recognise my programming language or cannot run Tomcat. So frustrating

  • @cu806
    @cu806 5 лет назад

    Can anyone share what they have built automated with python and how it interacts with large data sets in excel. I found it's often easier to work in excel instead of 75 80 lines of code python.

  • @attalwaqar3969
    @attalwaqar3969 5 лет назад

    Hi! I have finished basic Java and i practice and learned it as well but i don't know what can i start with to develop an application or where can i get a little guidance please anyone who experience the same, give me some advice about wither i need to learn advanced Java or i need to build some application based on core java. please please please.

  • @nandomax3
    @nandomax3 4 года назад

    Following this tutorial I hope I'll learn how to learn more from tutorials

  • @slimyelow
    @slimyelow 3 года назад +1

    One more tip. If you find another say Udemy course at a ridiculously low bargain price on pretty much the same topic grounds you already know, buy it and complete it. This process is akin to professional work experience. - cementing your skills just like a pro !

  • @miya7525
    @miya7525 5 лет назад

    What if you do a tutorial for an app. You start building on that application and find yourself stuck on a bug for days. Currently what im dealing with and i feel like im wasting so much time trying to a build a certain functionality that im not progressing on

  • @pavelow36
    @pavelow36 5 лет назад +1

    tutorials are good for overview and quick brush up. but you always need to supplement that with your own mini-projects. you need to keep doing it looking for ways to improve your old code, clean it up, add new functions, etc. just like when you write something on paper (back in the days when people used pens), it tends to go into your brain more than just using your eyes and ears. I think it was Feynman who said you need to teach it to be able to learn it.

  • @jordanlanier7063
    @jordanlanier7063 4 года назад

    This definitely applies to me unfortunately. I feel like I’m just unable to obtain react

  • @daniel71626
    @daniel71626 4 года назад

    I'm still using tutorials, but i have more understanding than before. And many tutorials start at a basic level. I like the more advanced stuff... like LAMP stack in OOP.

  • @devoiddude
    @devoiddude 5 лет назад

    Any tutorial series coming from you andy?

  • @juliusnewton7520
    @juliusnewton7520 3 года назад

    any suggestions on websites or platforms I could use to practice what I learned from reading/self studying programming as a true beginner to programming. I am looking to transition into a career as a security software developer. Thanks

  • @mikelemayawesometimeallthe6434
    @mikelemayawesometimeallthe6434 5 лет назад

    Hi, have caught a number of your videos over the past year and really appreciate them. Thank you! All good stuff in this video but the major problem I run into more often than not w tutorials as a beginner isn't addressed here... when I'm watching such tutorials as well as in courses... What works for the tutor fails for me... What a lot of tutorials omit is how to figure out trouble shooting when things don't go how they're supposed to. For example I can't finish my coursera course because following specific instructions to share my Jupyter Notebook in Watson studio give me a link but doesn't allow it to be seen by others.... Or in a couple Pandas tutorials the way to build a regression object doesn't give accurate outputs in the practice exercise that goes along with the tutorial... Regardless of what area of programming one is interested in, what is your general advice when looking up documentation, stackoverflow... etc. isn't connecting the dots??

  • @markaustin9590
    @markaustin9590 5 лет назад

    need help seting up basic projects

  • @slimyelow
    @slimyelow 3 года назад +1

    The coolest moments in tuts are: "ah, I know that...." and you code the entire segment without blinking, only to find out that the instructor put in his own twist.... yet you score another point, because that is maybe how your future software colleagues may have done it!

    • @asherxasher8914
      @asherxasher8914 3 года назад

      Really took me a while to learn that lol the way my instructor may code it isn't the only way to code it. There's more than one way to skin a cat.

  • @HavocGamingChannel
    @HavocGamingChannel 5 лет назад

    Great video and great tips! I'll have a Word document up, and whenever an unknown term is used, I'll type it in the Word doc to get more detailed insight at a later time. I've got a pretty good dictionary going :p. Learning the terminology enhances conceptual learning, for me anyway. I get real experience in Python while following along with the book, "Python Crash Course (2nd Edition)" - it's been teaching me a ton in an easy way. By the end of the book, you'll make an old school alien shooter game

  • @slimyelow
    @slimyelow 3 года назад +1

    I have found learning / progress diaries to be invaluable. I swear every one of you is going to look at an entry from just a few days back and say: "WTF! Did I really learn that?".

  • @chito510_
    @chito510_ 4 года назад +1

    9:30 I have a quick question. I understand a concept of repetition, but how would that work in programming? In basketball I can practice handling drills that will help me with the theory and then i can put it into practice in a pick up game because i know i will use everything from layups, jumpshots, passing...how would that work in programming if you are going to build different projects? Do I make the same project everytime? Sorry if it’s a stupid question😅

  • @plskz
    @plskz 4 года назад

    thank u

  • @jackjones3657
    @jackjones3657 4 года назад

    You make a good point that the brain needs to be rewired to pleasure by more novel things, like learning a new skill. There are A LOT of entertainment based superficial distractions one needs to filter out. Also don't lose the forest for the trees, focus on one skill at a time.

  • @VinhNguyen-my1gb
    @VinhNguyen-my1gb 4 года назад

    Andy I agree with what you say to a certain point, but as a beginner you need to start somewhere. People are different, and each one learns differently. The must important thing is to do it. Dive in. Thanks for your videos though

  • @AmitSingh-fl1cs
    @AmitSingh-fl1cs 4 года назад

    found solutions to all of my problems

  • @NguyenDuy-jd6sm
    @NguyenDuy-jd6sm 5 лет назад +9

    Hi Andy, i watched a lot of your video for a while and i really like the way you explain things. Can you make a video about Object Orient Programming next. I found the topic is quite hard to gasp for beginner. Thank you in advance

    • @seetsamolapo5600
      @seetsamolapo5600 3 года назад

      Java OOP - Thomas Wu. Trust me it was also a problem

  • @slimyelow
    @slimyelow 3 года назад +1

    Writing down immediately the tiniest things from a tutorial reinforces actual learning and understanding . This has been proven scientifically.

  • @slimyelow
    @slimyelow 3 года назад +1

    I am actually taking notes on this video and spewing out comments. Read them !

  • @harshbarj
    @harshbarj 3 года назад

    What I have found to be most helpful is to do small junk programs. So watch a tutorial on one new idea or command and then write a small program that uses that. It can be something as simple as a number guessing game, or input a few numbers and find the largest. But the goal should be to use the new idea / command in that code, even if there is a better way to do it. It's one thing to read, but another to actually implement what you are reading into a project.

  • @stutiupreti5447
    @stutiupreti5447 3 года назад

    Can you give link of your website?

  • @GameplayzOfficial
    @GameplayzOfficial 5 лет назад +1

    10:52 That one was the worst to me, every single project I tried to make required a lot more than just the barebones. Let me build a website with HTML and CSS, oh, need to know Javascript to create a slider, oh, need to know jQuery to make a nice button, oh wait, need Bootstrap to make it responsive, and it keeps going. Now I'm able to be more focused on what matters, but for years didn't finish anything for the reason mentioned.

  • @progtom7585
    @progtom7585 4 года назад

    learn by DOING - simple, but NOT easy!!
    cheers Andy 👌

  • @MrSonofaMother
    @MrSonofaMother 5 лет назад

    I highly recommend App Academy boot camp, because it completely free and has help me improve with challenging problems and a set curriculum that is easy to follow. I was in the same place just being stuck doing tutorial after tutorial on udemy and youtube for around 4 months. I knew how to do things in theory but didn't have any projects or couldn't actually figure out what to code

    • @MrSonofaMother
      @MrSonofaMother 5 лет назад +1

      @@SahraClayton what are you talking about, its a web site it works on any OS. Google search free App Academy, its there for every body no matter what OS

  • @breakinggreatness1010
    @breakinggreatness1010 4 года назад

    I realized the Paradox of choice when learning code is a bad thing. Having said that, you can also find the best instructor for your learning type and move slowly through the content - really understanding the material. Sometimes I repeat exercises over and over, it's amazing how much you think you understand vs how much is understood.

  • @christopherdunlap1056
    @christopherdunlap1056 5 лет назад +2

    Your video's help me keep myself on track and motivated. Thank yoy and I hope you keep posting 😊

    • @AndySterkowitz
      @AndySterkowitz  5 лет назад +1

      Glad to hear Christopher. Keep on going!

  • @paulcamerino233
    @paulcamerino233 4 года назад

    Wow you really got me there and I am so thankful for you doing this videos. Tutorials is not everything you have to work your ass out too to make sure to yourself that the things you learned in those tutorials is truly understood by you. I am really in loop here, as a student, and trying to learn by myself with the fundamentals of my subjects (the pain in uni coz instructor expects you to know their subjects more than them idk) this really hit me awake so now I will start to change my routine. Thank you again! I just found your channel and I love your videos it is so helpful to a lost kid like me haha