+ 5

Does anyone have any suggestions on software development colleges in Texas, and in the United States in general?

5th Jan 2018, 12:06 AM
Clint
Clint - avatar
27 Réponses
+ 8
you study a lot on your own , do a lot of coding , when in doubt Google it , if Google not helping , ask in SoloLearn, follow good PROGRAMMERs in SoloLearn , ask them for any guidance if ur really stuck. learn challenge code a lot talk less and do more ( I'm still working on this one😅) that's it
5th Jan 2018, 2:34 AM
Morpheus
Morpheus - avatar
+ 7
see !!! Mason Neville just opened a CS library in your post thread, and this is why I prefer community learning and solo learning regarding ur doubts in this direction , take few steps give it few sincere months , you ll be giving me directions 👍 take suggestions from other people too for college , note that it's just my opinion
5th Jan 2018, 2:20 AM
Morpheus
Morpheus - avatar
+ 6
5th Jan 2018, 12:39 AM
bobbie
bobbie - avatar
+ 6
you know in retrospection , I regret wasting my 6 years ( 2 years extra for paperbacks😅) for a CS degree from a mediocre college , although it was not bad as i was presented with all opportunities to grab , but I guess , when it comes to practical learning colleges are wastage of time, but not if you're going for degree sake. after all what good is a programmer if he can't solve real life problems( and with real life I mean current generation, not stone age IT issues being taught at colleges, by retired enginneers , Industry quitters or wannabe SEs). well I am also to blame for not studying well, but since there are thousands like me in my country who feel the same therefore I feel there's something wrong with the system ( maybe USA has better teaching facilities and faculties even for mediocre colleges) but sometimes college does inculcates few other values like ... to get more open to world, friendship, trust , authenticity , and few other stuffs like that but if going because of above reasons then army schools are better option.😸( u can always learn programming later ) srry , for not providing any good college info for Texas coz I am from another country , but just wanted to share my feelings.
5th Jan 2018, 1:46 AM
Morpheus
Morpheus - avatar
+ 6
@clint, why do you wanna learn programming, this question will help to answer ur question , trust me, take ur time, example for me it's the best way to make money by doing things that I can enjoy (😄 sometimes), specifically talking then here it is, I played games for a very long time, surfed web for even longer time, now I don't wanna be a consumer of services but a creator of one , and you know what it just clicked me recently and has been driving me to study more and more, I learned more from courses , web tutorials , than my college could ever taught ( although it came a bit easy for me because of my background)
5th Jan 2018, 1:55 AM
Morpheus
Morpheus - avatar
+ 6
this guy also knows what I am talking about, and he's ( was😅) from MIT https://youtu.be/6rT00QXqZak
5th Jan 2018, 2:05 AM
Morpheus
Morpheus - avatar
+ 5
Interesting perspective Morpheus. Personally I have only been learning for around 3 months I started here and I am enjoying it.
5th Jan 2018, 2:10 AM
bobbie
bobbie - avatar
+ 5
You can challenge players directly by going to their profile and on the top right you have options, one of which is challenge
5th Jan 2018, 2:45 AM
Mason Neville
Mason Neville - avatar
+ 5
plus when you are low level and challenge higher level users, as long as you get a good answer or two you still make some xp, if you win, you make a load, if you lose with no good answers, you lose like 1xp
5th Jan 2018, 2:47 AM
Mason Neville
Mason Neville - avatar
+ 4
To be honest, your best bet would be to go with the school out of the choices you have in which has the highest graduation-rate. These rates can be found by searching them online. A school with a high graduation-rate means that the professors are skilled when it comes to teaching their students in a way which has most of them (if not all) understanding the difficult concepts much quicker/easier. Software Development tends to be a very, very difficult field for some, so a professor's skill in teaching/lecturing is very important to their students.
5th Jan 2018, 12:22 AM
Fox
Fox - avatar
+ 4
you gotta check your settings, currently you only accept java & c#, which I don't know that much either. You can challenge me in JS/HTML/C++/Python/C#
5th Jan 2018, 2:44 AM
Mason Neville
Mason Neville - avatar
+ 3
I have heard UT Dallas mentioned a few times in the past. I can't recollect what was said, but to my knowledge, nothing bad was said about it.
5th Jan 2018, 12:28 AM
Fox
Fox - avatar
+ 3
find a project, work on it, find out how to do it by studying the existing litterature, when there's something you don't get, ask the community ; SL - Stack - [...]
5th Jan 2018, 2:32 AM
Mason Neville
Mason Neville - avatar
+ 2
Okay, thanks. I've been kind of thinking about UT Dallas, have you heard anything about that one?
5th Jan 2018, 12:23 AM
Clint
Clint - avatar
+ 2
I'm very new and very interested in community learning
5th Jan 2018, 2:22 AM
Clint
Clint - avatar
+ 2
so, how exactly does community learning work?
5th Jan 2018, 2:28 AM
Clint
Clint - avatar
+ 2
lol interesting, okay
5th Jan 2018, 2:37 AM
Clint
Clint - avatar
+ 2
at the current time I'm interested in app development. I have Android studio, unity, and unreal engine, but I'm unfamiliar with the bazaarness of the Android coding, a lot of imports and things I don't understand, and I don't know any c# for unity. in fact, I got this app so that I could begin learning c# and this app has been a lot more and a lot better than I expected.
5th Jan 2018, 2:44 AM
Clint
Clint - avatar
+ 1
okay, thanks!
5th Jan 2018, 1:09 AM
Clint
Clint - avatar