How do I enjoy learning to code if I'm not autistic?

I want to make it

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I'm autistic and I don't enjoy it

same. I don't get the appeal with the programming meme, especially all the constantly changing frameworks. learn one thing you have to learn another, so gay

Been learning to code over the lockdown. I'm starting with web development and likely will move into programming.

- Torrent the web development bootcamp from uDemy. The one taught by Angela Yu. It's really good and through, and long. I've been doing it everyday.

- Download Sololearn for your phone. When you have a few minutes shitting, review the lessons. Drill the syntaxes into your head.

- Talk to friends who have learned. They are great motivators, and most like having somebody else to talk nerd shit with.

This. I'm smart and know the basics of programming. But I'm expected to know java, javascript, html, css, c, python and then a bunch of frameworks like django on top, along with 30 years experience when I'm in my 20's to get considered for a job. Fuck that.

fuck off dude. nobody expects you to have 30 years xp. Also it's not hard to swap between languages most of the time as long as you can remember syntax.

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Adderall

>what is purposely exaggerating for effect
goddamn you really are autistic huh

Follow YouTube project tutorials step by step and then you’ll get accustomed to it and learn as you go and be able to apply that knowledge to your own projects/work etc

Oh what I do is treat it like a puzzle. Think about when you tear something apart to see how it works. That’s what I do with some else’s code but I try to put it back together in my own way. If it doesn’t work why?
I look it up? Just like most of my computer problems.
Also look up coding classes. More things to solve/assignments and they’ll give you resources and they tend to have GitHubs and LinkedIns. Lectures tend to be boring but again, it’s more to solve and get your brain going.
A lot of it is like wierd grammar and some is just copy and pasting with some your own tweaks that you need to make it work.

For some babysteps try html or css. Maybe do a mockup program to get a good feel of how core is laid out base how place things

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I also like programming, so probably yes

just be very stubborn. if something doesn't work i will sit there for as long as it takes to make it work. see it as a challenge to you specifically.

Here’s a course on html
coursera.org/learn/html/home/welcome
Html is what kids used to play with only to edit thier homepages on neopets and MySpace.
Now coursera is one of those bogus free trail but put your card in shit. But just cancel it when your done.
It should only take you a day to do this class, a week max

I can code but video games are more fun. To level up my coding skills I had to get rid of my ps4 and uninstall steam. Then my gf wanted to play ps4 with me and ruined my coding time, so I broke up with her.

Stop that shit nigga
Download a compiler, open the Dokumentation site of a language and think of a project you want to realize
>web development
As far as i know thats even more pajeet than the rest

Code a girlfriend from python

Oddly web dev sort of in demand along with ui.
I actually been having people in LinkedIn interested in me. Though we meet before the pandemic.
Though because of it the have to keep on pushing off the position so I’ve been adding more coding to my arsenal while I’m waiting for thier office to reopen

You're already not going to make it. They are teaching 9 year olds to code in elementary school. You think you stand a chance against them in 12 years in a competitive job market?

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I and many people started learning to code with RuneScape private servers at 12 but took a different career path

Networking makes a big difference. I’ve seen some sad, really unfair examples.

you only need to learn javascript and the general design patterns, the framework is irrelevant

Dunno with ui and web dev the most important thing is to design a good and efficient layout, or a super shit manipula layout when you try to sell stuff
Thats not the typical codeautist work
>most German universities fail at this completely lol, worst layouts i know
but you can do this without being able to code, you can do it in ms paint if needed and let the rest do some pajeet
I guess if you are good at design and programming there is a place for you

If you are starting from scratch and don't enjoy coding, downloading a complier, reading documentation, and thinking you are going to build something great isn't likely.

Experience is mostly HR bullshit. If you know concepts and enough syntax, have good projects on your portfolio (this is the most important part), and aren't a sociopath (unlikely since you're on biz), then you can get a job.

>have good projects on your portfolio (this is the most important part)
Where do you build your portfolio? Github? Your own website? Can you just list it on your resume and then show them?

it's honestly a mix of experience between knowing customers/clients who are illiterate with computers and helping them navigate and good explaining processes online, a bit of knowing color theory, good research skills, and relearning some code when I was a kid.

I'm still relearning babby's first coding and my alignment and coloring is still a bit off from you can still see from my last dummy text assignment xtha99.github.io/mod3/
There's some stuff I really need to polish

Not autistic nor do I code for a job. Learned coding so I could make video games. No intention of using it to get a job in coding. Like I'm going to learn 10+ languages just to earn 40k a year.

Another user aware if this. Most people probably get rejected by a computer and don't even get an interview.

Learning to code is like learning to draw or paint or do photography. It’s one this to know the technical stuff but being able to apply creativity (which can’t be taught) is the key. Anybody can learn anything, it’s fucking easy, just read a fucking book, but to be able to take that knowledge and do something special with it. That is invaluable and what separates rich men from poor men.

yeah, thats why it's best to try to do the most personal approach possible. Even if you don't get hired you can stick out a bit a person's brain. Make sure if you can do a cover letter do it and make least genetic as possible.

If it's not a bot but HR reading you resume and cover letter, it's like the 30th... 50th one? Why the fuck should he care about yours and not add it the scrap? give the reasons, make your's wake him the fuck up

Because its good money & minimal effort (once you get your head around it). That's it, I don't like it, but it's better than anything else I've tried.

> i do not understand this
> i do not understand that

you are a midwit
find something else

t. bachelors in CS, masters in AI

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