I am a final year engineering student, and I can confirm that all the points you told are something I can totally relate to. Please talk about how to nail job interviews, I am always getting rejections in the final or semifinal rech rounds. Thanks Edit: I have 2 job offers now
Thanks a lot for this video, it quite helps and I can so relate, though I won't quite say I'm building the next silicon Valley as a beginner 😅😂but I'm working on a barely intermediate project with 10 months of experience. Great content!
4 and 5 are great, but I respectfully disagree with 1 and 3. Large projects can be motivating, especially if you're not familiar with the basics. They're an opportunity to grow, learn, and improve. Smaller projects might work better for some learning styles, but large projects might work better for others, it's hard to generalize. Eventually, we'll all be working on large projects at work, doing things we've never done before so it might be advantageous to experience with large projects and things we don't know early. Just my opinion and I respect and appreciate yours.
Hi Jane, thank you for your comment. I agree, it may have been an over-generalization, and, you're right, large projects can definitely be motivating and incredible learning experiences. I included it because when I started learning how to code (in my first few months), I found I would have ideas for large, intricate applications that required a frontend, API, user authentication, state management, etc and I personally found it overwhelming. I would start one part and get stuck or realize that I didn't fully understand XYZ and sometimes get frustrated. To combat that, I found it a little easier to learn each thing on its own (in bite sized chunks) and later down the road try building something that incorporates the elements I had learned. However, like you said, for some, a larger project may work better for some, and I have some friends who were able to pull off awesome and huge projects early on in their learning experience. However, personally, I had trouble with that as a super beginner. Thank you for sharing your opinion, I appreciate yours as well :)
Thank you for your kind words! I am just starting out and have only been making tech related videos for a few weeks. I am hoping to grow my channel with more content in the future!
Impressive!! Keep up your great work
This actually helps👏🏻👍🏻
I am glad it does!
Couldn't agree more on 4, Twitter and RUclips helped a lot in this regard.
BTW I loved the db movie too, eagerly waiting for the SQL🤣🤭
I am a final year engineering student, and I can confirm that all the points you told are something I can totally relate to.
Please talk about how to nail job interviews, I am always getting rejections in the final or semifinal rech rounds.
Thanks
Edit:
I have 2 job offers now
Everything has agrees and disagrees so it's normal . Don't leave to have opinions. By the way I found this randomly on twitter lol 😎 keep going.....
Carla have you made a video about coding roadmaps, like suggested paths? Thank you for your time.
Thanks a lot for this video, it quite helps and I can so relate, though I won't quite say I'm building the next silicon Valley as a beginner 😅😂but I'm working on a barely intermediate project with 10 months of experience.
Great content!
Glad it was helpful!
4 and 5 are great, but I respectfully disagree with 1 and 3. Large projects can be motivating, especially if you're not familiar with the basics. They're an opportunity to grow, learn, and improve. Smaller projects might work better for some learning styles, but large projects might work better for others, it's hard to generalize. Eventually, we'll all be working on large projects at work, doing things we've never done before so it might be advantageous to experience with large projects and things we don't know early. Just my opinion and I respect and appreciate yours.
Hi Jane, thank you for your comment. I agree, it may have been an over-generalization, and, you're right, large projects can definitely be motivating and incredible learning experiences. I included it because when I started learning how to code (in my first few months), I found I would have ideas for large, intricate applications that required a frontend, API, user authentication, state management, etc and I personally found it overwhelming. I would start one part and get stuck or realize that I didn't fully understand XYZ and sometimes get frustrated. To combat that, I found it a little easier to learn each thing on its own (in bite sized chunks) and later down the road try building something that incorporates the elements I had learned. However, like you said, for some, a larger project may work better for some, and I have some friends who were able to pull off awesome and huge projects early on in their learning experience. However, personally, I had trouble with that as a super beginner. Thank you for sharing your opinion, I appreciate yours as well :)
How does this channel not have more followers? Great content, great tips!
Thank you for your kind words! I am just starting out and have only been making tech related videos for a few weeks. I am hoping to grow my channel with more content in the future!
You need more subs
Omg - I want cat delivery 👁️👄👁️