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  • So as many of you know

  • I've created a time machine but it broke so now I can only talk

  • Figuratively about time travel and if I were to travel back in time and tell my younger self five things

  • I wish I knew when I was him. This is what that would be

  • Thing number 1, there is no secret sauce to learning how to code

  • I remember emailing people around my age or maybe even

  • Older trying to figure out how they learned how to code like I thought it was some secret some giant secret

  • That you either had it or you didn't. I didn't understand that you actually had to learn and learn and learn and learn

  • Until I could actually get to being a mediocre programmer

  • I thought I was going to be able to figure out how to be a programmer overnight

  • That's kind of, in all honesty, when I was younger, that's kind of how I thought it worked

  • I was trying to figure out that secret sauce something that would make it easy to get to that success. That's

  • Not true with anything in life. Nothing will.. there... There's not gonna be any secret sauce

  • Unless you're some type of chef

  • Something I did a lot when I was first learning programming was jumping from language to language

  • And I just kind of learned the basics of each language, but never really excelled in any of those languages. Advice number two

  • That would have to be "specialize"

  • It's okay to understand other tools and other languages, but

  • Specialize in what you want to do. If it's iOS development, specialize in Swift and the tools that you use in order to create iOS Applications

  • If you want to do Java enterprise applications, learn the tools in the language for that

  • specialize, specialize, specialize, because once you get to that level of

  • "Look, I'm pretty good at Java development." Then you can jump over to Swift development or C++ or Python.

  • Just focus on one language, one toolset, one type of

  • Application that you're working on, and see that through until you get to a level that is competent

  • And you know more than just the basics; something that you actually understand what's going on, instead of just writing code.

  • Tip number 3, "Use Google." I get this question asked all the time

  • It's like "do programmers in that professional field," whether whatever your title may be

  • "Do they use things like Stack Overflow and tutorials online to kind of help them out with a particular problem?"

  • The answer is yes. Use Google to figure out

  • What bug you're trying to fix, what problem you're trying to solve. If you're having a syntax problem

  • You run into a bug or you can't figure out how to implement a particular feature in an app

  • Google it. Try to figure out how to do it

  • Otherwise, what are you gonna do? Just sit on your hands and hope that it gets done on its own

  • There's really no other alternative. Everyone thinks that programmers just type on their keyboard and boom

  • There's a giant application right there in front of you know

  • No. They use whatever resources that is that they have at hand, whether that be a book or Google.

  • All right. We're going to take a quick intermission. That is a candy intermission

  • I'm not sure if I've told you guys this before, but I think I have a little problem

  • I'm harshly, slightly, maybe

  • Incredibly addicted to candy. I just have the biggest sweet.

  • While I eat this candy, I want to talk about today's sponsor

  • They've been a sponsor on this channel before. They love what we're doing over here

  • And they wanted to support what we're doing, and I think they're a very good product

  • And of course I only bring on very good products to be sponsors on my channel, and that is "Skillshare.com"

  • I know most of you already know what "Skillshare.com" is, so, and you kind of know how things go in this channel with "Skillshare.com," they'd like to give y'all

  • two months for free for the first 500 of y'all that signup

  • The link right now is down on the top of the description

  • So make sure you click on that, get those two months for free

  • That's my gift to ya'll, Skillshare's gift to y'all really, so make sure you do that

  • Be quick first 500, but for the few of you who don't know what "Skillshare.com" is

  • That's okay, cause I'm gonna go over it right now.

  • "Skillshare," to be honest with you, is one of the most affordable online learning communities where they have a lot of different

  • genres of video courses on their site that you pay a monthly fee of 10 to

  • 15 dollars per month on average, depending if you get the annual plan or the monthly plan respectively

  • And the genres on their website include things like business, technology, design,

  • So technology would include programming of course, and design would include user interface and user experience design

  • Which, as you see in some of my Adobe XD videos,

  • but they go in a lot more depth on Skillshare than I do on my youtube channel. And what I mainly use "Skillshare.com" for

  • Is their business, their marketing, their videography, and their photography.

  • I like to take a lot of those courses because that really helps me up my youtube game

  • Right now my camera is kind of broken back there

  • So I'm recording on my webcam

  • But I am getting a new camera just for you guys to know that

  • But they do help you out in many different ways on "Skillshare.com," and considering you can get two months free

  • Can't really beat that. So for the folks over "Skillshare," this one's for you. Thank you

  • This is actually how I eat, nerds. I have a problem, I know.

  • Alright. Now that I'm getting the sugar-high going, let's get into tip number four and that is

  • "Programming is problem-solving not typing code." Think of languages as tools in your tool-belt

  • But you need to figure out how to solve the problem at hand

  • Using your programming language. So don't think of programming as just typing code, think of programming as critical thinking

  • Deconstructing a problem in order to formulate a solution

  • That is programming the sooner you realize that the better you'll be.

  • And the way I want to finish off this video is

  • Very much intentional, because I want this to be the thing that you take away from this video and start doing right now

  • Tip number five is "Just build it." Stop reading stuff online

  • Stop watching YouTube videos, just Build IT.

  • If you find a problem in an application that you want to build, then start building that.

  • If the first thing you need to figure out how to do is set up a landing page for a website, look how to set up a landing page for a website.

  • If you're building an iOS application, and you need to figure out how to do login and sign up, look up how to do login and sign up

  • Don't try to find a whole entire application just follow through the tutorial, figure out what you want in your particular application

  • Build a foundation for the application, and then start adding in what you need as a part of that application.

  • If you don't know where to start, well, then you need to learn the basics of that tool set, that programming language and that.

  • But if you've already built a small-scale iOS application for example

  • Step it up a little bit

  • Step it up to the application that you have in your head

  • After all you probably didn't get into iOS development, or whatever type of development you're going after just to learn it.

  • Most of you all probably have an idea in your head that you want to create

  • So once you have created two or three small apps like a little calculator app or what have you

  • Work on that dream app if you will. Start working on that

  • Even if you don't know how to do it

  • So if you just like I said if you don't know how to implement a particular feature

  • Then you can find some type of

  • Advice or tutorial online, and then you suit it to your needs

  • You make it work for you

  • JUST BUILD IT

  • That is gonna be the best way to learn. If you're one of those few people who don't have an app idea in your head

  • That you want to create that's okay

  • Don't worry about that

  • Create a small app following some type of tutorial and then start adding your own custom features into it

  • Imagine you have a game like "Flappy Bird," what are a few other things that you can add into "Flappy Bird" like coins or different lives

  • Or leaderboards. I don't know what "Flappy Bird" had, maybe it did have all this stuff, but maybe you can add in some little Mario

  • Plant-eaters that come out of those pipes that flappy bird has to go through or something like that, you know what I mean?

  • So just add in some type of feature

  • If you don't have an idea already in your head. Third time's a charm. JUST BUILD IT

  • Stop looking. Stop reading. Build it. Alright guys. That's all I have for you

  • If you are new here and you like the content that you see on this channel

  • Go back look on my channel to see if you actually like the content make sure you hit that subscribe button

  • remember the first 500 of y'all that sign up using the link in the

  • Description get two months of "Skillshare" for free. That does three things

  • That gives you free "Skillshare." Free knowledge if you will.

  • It helps me, because the more people who interact with that link down there and sign up for "Skillshare"

  • The more likely "Skillshare" will continue to support the channel. And three it helps "Skillshare," because they want you on their platform

  • It's a win-win all around that's kind of why I do these things. If you have any questions, like always, leave them down below

  • I read every single comment that comes on this channel. I will answer every single question that warrants an answer

  • Have a good one. Peace. Didn't wanna hit the mic there

  • And I can't turn off the camera from that way

So as many of you know

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A2 初級

プログラミングを始めた時に知っておきたかった5つのこと (5 THINGS I WISH I KNEW When I Started Programming)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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