+ 20
How do you cope with other courses in college, since you started learning to code ?
Since coding is more of a skill than just passing an exam in school. Getting addicted to coding slows down progress in other non-coding courses!
3 Answers
+ 11
No, I don't think coding slow than progress in other non coding skills. It rather sharpens your thinking in non coding skills. You'll think ahead of others in solving problems.
For instance...
My first degree was in non coding skill, I concentrated much more on coding than my courses and still I find it easy during exams than others that read the courses very well.
I graduated with second class honours (upper division).
Coding expands brain cells I think.
+ 14
This is my main problem -
Coding is one of the core courses I took, and I never really coped with other courses. I literally left them to die on their own and only flip through the slides when the exam is, tomorrow (ATOW, I have a 115 course test approx 19 hours from now). This has caused my results to be on both extremes - I can have an average of 96% on coding, but 40% on discrete structures, etc.
It's an addiction which I'm apparently, proudly not handling well. xD
+ 3
non coding-courses get screwed :)