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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You know all those crazy ideas you have? Implement them! NOW! In ten years, I'll be an overnight success! |
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Buy yourself the biggest, brightest monitor you can possibly afford (e.g. 30" Dell or Apple). You'll be staring at it for a long time. |
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Spec your ideas before you code them. |
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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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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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The debugger is your best friend. Learn it, use it, love it. |
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Pascal won't last long. Plan to keep learning new languages throughout your career, or you won't last long either. |
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Get a computer science degree, and learn math, so you won't be stuck building 3 page forms for peanuts. |
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Avoid jobs with companies who have no other IT support besides yourself. |
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Get a real job in the the industry while you're still in school so you can get real experience when you graduate. |
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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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Never rewrite anything that works from scratch. Do refactoring instead. |
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Learn about the tools you use and how they work. |
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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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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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Learn to use the keyboard keyboard shortcuts in your IDE and other commonly used programs. The more time your fingers are on the keyboard the better. Plus it makes you look like a pro to other people! lol |
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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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bpapa is right. While you're young and relatively inexperienced, be picky about the jobs you select... they will become your experience. |
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Read books I have developed .NET for about 3 years now, but I started reading programming books just about one year ago. I thought I am fine if I read some blogs, but infact you learn very much if you read books. |
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If somebody asks you to change something that you've worked on for a while & you feel really angry/frustrated about this - This is a problem with you. Learn to take criticism better. |
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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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First: What Patrick said... you need source control Second: Take a creative writing class and a public speaking class. Being able to effectively communicate your ideas to co-workers, your boss, or people at a conference is just as important as having the idea in the first place. |
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I would tell myself to learn C and continue to learn C++. My first language was C++, but I don't feel I'm that good in it as when I went to university, I was pretty much forced into Java. So I would just encourage myself to learn as much as I can in C and C++ before going to university. |
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Learn Smalltalk. The earlier you really appreciate and understanded object-oriented design the better! |
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Test First - It forces you to define the minimal set of criteria you need to solve your problem. You'll build better interfaces (api), and you'll write less code by developing "just enough" code to pass the test. The tests also serve as "documentation" to other developers on how the system is supposed to behave and allows them to add behavior without fear they are breaking functionality. I was surprised how effective this technique is and how it increased my productivity. |
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Don't get your life advice on the internet. |
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Keep up with the latest technologies, but don't overspecialize. Everything becomes obsolete or loses popularity eventually. |
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Write or help write something other people use and you have to support - you'll soon see where your weaknesses are when other people get their grubby mitts on your hard work! |
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Don't do prototypes! |
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