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I just feel so frustrated right now as I just finished one task.

Seems like every time I program (homework or other stuff), I make stupid mistakes that take me hours and hours to fix, sometimes it takes me the whole night just to finish a fairly small homework. Even if I do debug, still need lots of time to finish.

I love writing code and I'm constantly learning but there are a lot of those nights that I feel that maybe I'm just too "dumb" or careless to be good at it especially when I'm at the workplace in the future.

Any advice on this? Is this normal?

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Completely normal... – Arnis L. Jun 9 at 9:48
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Oh, yea, one more thing. I personally believe that because you have noticed this limitation in yourself that you will strive to resolve it. This in itself makes you much more likely to grow into an intelligent, resourceful, and thoughtful programmer. – Russ Jun 9 at 14:11
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These little mistakes...those are called 'Bugs'. Welcome to the REAL WORLD, Charles...your red pill worked. – jrista Jun 9 at 16:53
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Closed. You're supposed to feel that way. If it ever stops, worry... – Shog9 Jun 9 at 18:21
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Totally normal, and it will get worse when/if you do homework in assembly, for example. Don't let the SO people get you down, we aren't all super geniuses - it just takes time and persistent effort (so I'm told). I'm in the same boat you are. – nullArray Nov 11 at 6:45
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40 Answers

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vote up 6 vote down

Sounds like you might want to look into Test-Driven Development - it can significantly reduce that kind of frustration.

But never eliminate. There's a very revealing quote from one of the guys working on the first computers (unfortunately, I don't remember the name) about how it was harder than expected and the moment he realized that he would spend much of the rest of his life finding errors in his own programs.

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vote up 13 vote down

This is a good time to learn best practices... write small, testable pieces of code, write unit tests. Write comments in your code so when debugging, you can immedately see what it should do (not just what it actually does...), etc.

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This is normal. In the beginning you have to get used to a certain way of thinking: What steps must I take to accomplish my task. As you refine these steps, you get closer and closer to a solution that can be put into code. The smaller the steps, the easier the coding.

The most important thing is to try and not feel too frustrated, instead try to learn as much as possible from the mistakes you make. Next time you start a new programming task, concentrate also on identifying situations where you've made mistakes before and the ask yourself what you need to do differently this time.

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vote up 21 vote down

Even the most experienced developers have those moments/days. I call them the "Damn I'm an idiot" family of errors.

It's where you spend hours going over your code trying to work out what the hell is wrong with it only to find it's something ridiculous you took for granted.

e.g.

  • You're actually looking at a different page/form/button
  • You had < instead of > or vice versa
  • You forgot to recompile before you ran it

etc.

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"Damn" is rather gentle for this class of errors – Matthew Whited Jun 9 at 17:50
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I think we all go through periods like this. If you persevere, things should get better. If your problems stem from lack of experience, the only way to get better is to keep on trying.

To try and minimise time-consuming errors, it is worthwhile to design your solution fully, on paper perhaps, before you actually start writing code. Not thinking through all aspects is a common reason for finding errors that cause you to backtrack and recode sections of your solution.

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vote up 10 vote down

Even developers with years of experience often spend hours resolving problems that turn out quite simple in the end. Feeling frustration is normal - software development is very hard by its nature. As you practice and gain experience simple tasks will take much less time but you will shift to harder tasks and they will consume their share of your time.

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vote up 4 vote down

Hey don't worry about these. I am a similar guy like you and am working in a software company now. These often happens. Just try to keep a track of silly mistakes you do and at a point you will avoid most of your mistakes. Just keep going... don't waste your time worrying about these because you can learn better than others if you make a mistake.

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I know the feeling but you'll learn to look for abvious failing points and you'll also get better at debugging for sure.

Persist! :)

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vote up 103 vote down

If learning to program doesn't make you feel dumb you're doing it wrong.

You will get used to it. I know - I feel the same way.

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I'm with Copas on this! Seems like the more things I learn the bigger the programming world gets, the more I realize how little I knew. – Akers Jun 19 at 23:27
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I am proud to be the 101st upvoter of this answer. w00t! – Maxim Z. Sep 14 at 4:28
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This is normal - although as time goes on and you persist at your craft, you'll become more efficient.

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