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If you could go back and give yourself one piece of advice at the start of your programming life/career to help you on your way what would it be ?

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Code doesn't exist unless it's checked into a version control system.

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It seems like hundreds of people here have a good story behind it. – Marko Dumic Oct 27 '08 at 23:51
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In my teen years, while learning to code, I actually had a harddrive crash that resulted in losing all code I'd ever written at the time. Including the software 3d-renderer I'd worked so hard on. That event made me decided to quit coding altogether. I obviously changed my mind at some point. – korona Nov 3 '08 at 18:00
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Actually, code doesn't exist unless its been backed up off site. One fire in the building that contains your VC system means your code doesn't exist. – Pyrolistical Nov 5 '08 at 0:30
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There was no versioning system when I started. How about that ? – ldigas Apr 22 at 4:21
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@korona: I'm not sure version control would have saved your code from a harddrive crash. Maybe keep backups on another drive just in case :) – Juliet May 8 at 3:23
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Make sure you meet a chick (and marry her) in college cause you won't meet anymore once you get into your (predominately male) workplace :)

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6 months out of the college and i am already banging my head over the desk over this. Too true. – Mostlyharmless Sep 16 '08 at 19:43
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You could also apply for a life outside work. – Oddmund Sep 19 '08 at 18:42
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It'll stay predominantly male as long as advice given to young programmers is geared to wards the boys. Downvoted. – chryss Sep 20 '08 at 20:24
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I met my girlfriend at work :P. – Richard Nienaber Oct 13 '08 at 11:52
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Since it's a super bad idea to date people at work anyway... learn how to meet people outside work, through other hobbies. – Kendall Helmstetter Gelner Feb 2 '09 at 4:33
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My biggest hurdle was/is stop thinking that I was stupid compared to other programmers. When you read great code or watch a great coder do his thing, realize he didn't get that way by some sort of magic, or that he was just born with this great ability.

He worked at it. He has made the mistakes you have made and he learned from them. Just know that the only difference between you and him is time and experience. Not some unseen, unobtainable knowledge.

Learn different languages, and when and why to use them. Learn an editor, learn everything you can about it. Learn as many tools as you can. You won't use them all but you will be able to chose the best and know why you chose them.

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This is the most valuable lesson I've learned since I got out of school! Once you get past this hurdle you can seriously start working towards becoming a great programmer yourself. – David Holm Jan 22 '09 at 8:13
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Programming is a very sedentary and often stressful job. It sucks you in and makes you eat cold pizza and drink soda at all hours of the night. Look around at your co-workers. Many software engineers are pretty heavy and unhealthy. I wish I were thinner and healthier.

My advice: Exercise daily. Eat right. Don't ever get soft in the middle.

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It's much easier to keep it off then it is to lose it, great advice. – John Meagher Sep 18 '08 at 0:02
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+1. I failed this advice. I think I'm going to go to the bar now. – Dave Markle Dec 9 '08 at 0:07
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Don't trade your 6-pack for a keg. – Sukotto Nov 6 at 21:22
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Actually finish some of your pet projects.

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..and put your pet projects our for public consumption. you'll discover challenges/features you never would have thought of. – russau Jul 2 at 7:11
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Never rewrite anything that works from scratch. Do refactoring instead.

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Joel Spolsky wrote about this: "Things You Should Never Do, Part I" joelonsoftware.com/articles/fog0000000069.html – Emile 81 Apr 7 at 19:29
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When you realize that your job sucks, LEAVE. You're not under any obligation to stick with a failing company/project/team/... There are better things out there.

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Absolutely... I've made that mistake before and really lost my interest in programming. As a side note, it helps to be financially responsible and not bury yourself in credit debt so that you can afford to quit and not bankrupt yourself if you don't find a job right away. – neonski Oct 30 '08 at 18:37
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Hear, hear. Keep six months pay in a savings account. It makes it much easier to tell the boss to get lost. – Martin Brown Nov 3 '08 at 18:02
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Sep 4 '08 :-) .... What would you have said a month later? – Robert Fraser Jan 21 at 12:02
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You don't really know as much as you think you do (and 'select' Isn't Broken!)

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Get a job with an organization that considers software and programmers to be valuable and important to the organization's success. Stay away from employers who don't: the software will suck, your co-workers will not care, and there will be nothing you can do about it.

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This is easier said then done unfortunately – AntonioCS Dec 28 at 23:19
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Practice, practice, practice.

I used to think that reading books and attending lectures would somehow magically transform me into a great coder. While these things are still important, there is nothing at all that can replace writing your own code, and a lot of it.

Also, read other people's code, whether they are more advanced than you or not. There is rarely one single correct way to implement something, and a lot can be learned from seeing how others think.

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Practice and discuss with friends who are practicing. – Liam Oct 6 '08 at 8:59
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Learn to use a Debugger ASAP rather than using print()/exit() statements for debugging...

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Learn to use unit testing ASAP rather than using debugging – Borek Sep 26 '08 at 15:21
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But how do you debug your Unit tests then? :-) – Michael Stum Sep 26 '08 at 16:20
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Au contraire: I know plenty of people that I'd advise to learn the mental rigor required to debug using print statements, rather than the crutch of a debugger... – Rich Dec 11 '08 at 6:59
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+1 .. They should teach debugging techniques in college more – chakrit Dec 30 '08 at 19:13
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Neither are Unit tests. I work with SugarCRM and I can't really start making unit tests for all the code it has. What I can do is use a debugger and go through the code slowly and try to understand why it does what it does (there isn't much documentation about the inner workings of most of sugarcrm) – AntonioCS Dec 28 at 23:21
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Learn to type.

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you get a bump for a 3 word posting that is good.... :=) – Sheldon Feb 25 '09 at 20:23
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Two digits will not be enough come the year 2000.

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Don't spend so much time learning the quirks of the synax. Learn the concepts, and the rest will come.

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Always write your unit tests first! If you tell yourself "oh, I'll just write them later", it will never happen.

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Ergonomics matter! 14 hours straight same seat staring at screens. not natural.

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Great advice. I sometimes did this. Besides all the muscular pain, when I shut my eyes I would see code :( – AntonioCS Dec 28 at 23:23
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Spec your ideas before you code them.

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OMG...so true. if only i could persuade my fellow workers on this lol – crosenblum Jan 28 at 21:15
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Avoid jobs with companies who have no other IT support besides yourself.

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they don't appreciate you then, I've heard this is true. You don't have anyone to help sharpen your skills, and are likely to be underpaid and undersupported! – Sheldon Feb 25 '09 at 20:24
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If I'm talking to bpapa in college - do more development outside of your regular coursework. Get with a professor on a research project. When you graduate in the burst-bubble world it'll help you get a job instead of doing video game QA for 2 years.

If I'm talking to bpapa starting his professional career - you CAN afford to be picky when you are trying to decide which job to take. If an opportunity smells bad from afar, it's going to REALLY stink when you are actually working there.

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  1. Ask questions! Don't completely understand something? Ask questions until you do. Ask your teacher, co-workers, friends and on online communities like this one. The only dumb question is the one that was never asked.

  2. Having a 'it just works' attitude can get you down a very scare path if you ever have to maintain it. If you are afraid on maintaining your code then it's either overly complicated or you don't have the necessary deep understanding of how it's implemented.

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A few things:

1: When you pick your firsts real jobs, pick something you really love. Don't waste your time doing something you don't like just because it will give you experience, or even just because it pays well. Take advantage of the fact that early on your career you have way less to lose. Later (once you are married, or have kids, or are in dept, or all of the above) life will be harder, and you will have to make bigger compromises.

2: Get involved in every project you can think of during college. Contribute to a locally organized conference, work on a school software project, work on a codeplex|sourceforge|googlecode project. Party.

3: Have fun while doing all of the above.

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There is no such thing as a universal best practice. They all break down somewhere. Learn where your favorite techniques and patterns break and why.

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Just jump right in and have a go. It's not as hard as people make it out to be and the learning curve is a steep as you want it to be taking baby steps is just as valid a way of learning a new skill as taking giant leaps and it helps you to take stock of what the next step is.

To sum up, do it, do it at your own pace, evaluate your progress and goals frequently.

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Don't be affraid to put your code out there. Do it often and Do it well.

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Your wheel is not better!

Suck it up.

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But what if it is? – wbowers Nov 17 '08 at 20:12
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Or your name is Linus. – jleedev Jan 7 '09 at 4:06
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What if my wheel is what keeps me going when my primary task is so boring I want to kill myself? :P – David Holm Jan 22 '09 at 8:16
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Keep learning! Strive to learn at least one new language, technique, methodology, or concept every year.

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Understanding that to be a good programmer you HAVE to work with people. Being a geek introvert may seem like the perfect programmer profile but if you can't communicate with people they wont understand how to use what you've written.

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The best way to learn any language/framework/whatever is to start producing stuff using it. You can read all the blogs/books/theory you like - you don't truly know something until you've used it for a while.

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Never, ever stop learning new things. If you don't have the opportunity to try out new stuff at work, buy books and learn on your own.

Learn by both breadth and depth - learn a tiny bit about everything, and pick two or three things to really focus on and learn inside and out.

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You know all those crazy ideas you have? Implement them! NOW! In ten years, you'll be an overnight success!

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