Post by account_disabled on Mar 14, 2024 9:02:37 GMT 3
This is the job of engineers. I don't have a particular fondness for it. I just love the simplicity and expressiveness of it. The only question of which education is easier to master is what level you want to achieve. If we are talking about the development of basic applications then no special technical foundation is required. You just need to learn the language learn the simple syntax and start writing applications. Sooner or later you'll run into something incomprehensible with this approach. That's why I recommend starting with another programming language. In my opinion it would be better for technical experts to receive a general technical education not as a programmer's education but as an engineer's education.
Such a person knows at least in a general sense how computer boards work etc. so that B2B Fax Lead nothing looks like magic to him. From my own experience I can say that most of the people I respect as a professional are physicists, engineers, mathematicians and their perspective is much broader than just understanding code. Because programming itself is just an abstraction. In short any technical education that broadens your horizons will do. Then you need to ask a question. Is it possible to teach yourself to be a developer.
Yes if you make a conscious effort to learn and keep asking questions. Like I don't understand what a database is so I need to find a good book on the subject online and read it. There is no need to take courses in this area. I recommend you to use this is a news portal where people can exchange information and opinions. You can go to learning programming communities and request necessary literature or even a roadmap for your chosen career. Don't be afraid to educate yourself. From my experience I would say no one looks at during the interview. As one of my colleagues said a developer's face is theirs.
Such a person knows at least in a general sense how computer boards work etc. so that B2B Fax Lead nothing looks like magic to him. From my own experience I can say that most of the people I respect as a professional are physicists, engineers, mathematicians and their perspective is much broader than just understanding code. Because programming itself is just an abstraction. In short any technical education that broadens your horizons will do. Then you need to ask a question. Is it possible to teach yourself to be a developer.
Yes if you make a conscious effort to learn and keep asking questions. Like I don't understand what a database is so I need to find a good book on the subject online and read it. There is no need to take courses in this area. I recommend you to use this is a news portal where people can exchange information and opinions. You can go to learning programming communities and request necessary literature or even a roadmap for your chosen career. Don't be afraid to educate yourself. From my experience I would say no one looks at during the interview. As one of my colleagues said a developer's face is theirs.