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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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144 Answers

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Buy Microsoft stock.

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Understand to better key Google Search Keywords and Google Features Boz you are going to use google a LOT

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Configure your e-mail client to only check for new mail once ever 60 minutes or so and inform everyone at your company that you will only answer questions sent by mail.

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This is not meant to sound as philosophical as it does, and I post it in the context of programming.

Don't succumb to analysis paralysis. Even if you can't do it perfectly on the first attempt, just do it. Get a prototype version working then work to refine, enhance, and perfect the final product.

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Avoid jobs that deviate from your intended career goal of being a real programmer.

I've seen too many good coders get sucked into Help Desk / IT roles (which eventually became their careers) b/c they didn't look around and just settled with the first company to make an offer.

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Believe in yourself. Stick with it. Make it good enough, and people will love it.

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Keep up the good work.

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Learn about the tools you use and how they work.

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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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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 sleep in till midday every day when at uni studying comp sci, it won't end well for you that way.

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Read about your practice... Keep up with one job related blog/site... Always keep learning...

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Sometimes you just have to do whatever it is you think really needs to be done. It is easier to beg forgiveness than to ask permission.

At the same time, make sure you know how to do what needs to be done :)

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Screw this job! I never wanted to be a coder... I always wanted to be...

...A LUMBER JACK!

Leaping from tree to tree, as they float down the mighty rivers of British Columbia.

The Giant Redwood.

The Larch.

The Fir!

The mighty Scots Pine!

The lofty flowering Cherry!

The plucky little Apsen!

The limping Roo tree of Nigeria.

The towering Wattle of Aldershot!

The Maidenhead Weeping Water Plant!

The naughty Leicestershire Flashing Oak!

The flatulent Elm of West Ruislip!

The Quercus Maximus Bamber Gascoigni!

The Epigillus!

The Barter Hughius Greenus!

With my best buddy by my side, we'd sing! Sing! Sing!

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Go to college!! Especially before you get married and have 3 kids to feed!!!

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There's no such thing as "Real Programmers", and nothing Turing complete is "Just a Scripting Language". You don't have to be a hard core into ASM and low level C to get respect (though it can feel bad-ass). And don't ever use something just because it's an industry standard.

There is nothing wrong with loving python, javascript, hypercard, multimedia fusion, the starcraft map editor, or whatever your guilty pleasure "not a real man's language" is. Programming should be fun!

Also, Don't wait for academics to teach you computer science. Start learning now!

David: "Learn to Type"

Oddly enough, that's the one thing I went in strongly believing. I even taught myself dvorak =]. Now I don't have a shred of carpal tunnel, but I am getting back problems. Maybe I should have invested in a quality chair.

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I agree about the source control..very important.

Continue to learn other languages. Don't rely only on the language you program in at work. You never know when Microsoft is going to stop supporting it...

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Learning how to do stuff in practice can be even more fun then learning to do stuff in theory. Start with coding horror, read proggit (ok, so that wasn't available till I graduated college). Find blogs that interest you. Its scary at first but you'll understand it all soon. Who knows, one day I might even figure out what Steve Yegge is talking about.

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Decide what your core competency is and adjust your career to exploit that competency.

You can’t get a gold nugget from a horse turd no mater how hard you polish it.

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Based solely on the extremely limited experience that I've had, it would be: "You don't know half as much as you think you do." (Apply repeatedly.)

If I had a second it would be that "sometimes removing semi-colons is more useful than adding them."

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when coding, always disconnect your Internet connection.

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Know what you want the code to do (framed in the form of a test, which needn't be automated). And the code isn't done till it's passed that test.

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You learn to write good code the same way you learn to write good prose: practice and constructive criticism. If your organization doesn't do code reviews already, get them to do so. You'll be amazed at how much you learn by reviewing others' code and having others review your code.

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Beware the myth of the perfect code... it doesn't exist and never shall exist.

I'd also add that design patterns are something I should have picked up sooner than I did.

JB

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640k is not enough for everyone...

Oh,

and impersonating Bill Gates is not cool. I wish I knew that a sentence ago.

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Assume NOTHING!

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Be prepared to throw the first one away.

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Always write code with the assumption that the person who'll maintain it is a schizophrenic killer who knows where you live.

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Get the higher degrees before you get a job. It won't happen because of time and expenses otherwise.

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Start contributing to an open source project earlier (it took me nearly 10 years to get around to it) and check into a version control system much more regularly :)

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