+ 3
how do you learn programming every day?
Do you learn programming by creating an application or following a tutorial?
11 ответов
+ 20
Irman the only answer to this question is practice and by practice I mean any question you get your hands on.
1. You should solve atleast 4-5 codes daily (on your own, if you are not able to do so then take a bit help from others but first try your best)
2. Learn new concepts from different websites. What I do is get questions from wherever I can and start making codes.
3. I would not suggest jumping directly to making application because that would be too confusing and you will end up leaving that project demotivated.
4.You can follow tutorials, but if you already have completed a tutorial then you should not start from begining just read the topics that you are unfamilier with or not comfortable with.
Start small, take baby steps, get comfortable with concepts by each day passing and in no time you will be a great programmer.
+ 18
Try to gain the understanding of just one point or one feature every day and practiced at for the day.
The next day move on to another point to practice it with the previous day's learned information. Don't rush it. Just one day at a time, one building block at a time. Just make sure that you do understand how all the blocks fit together.
+ 10
Actually you learn by practicing.
Spend at least 2-3 hours a day.(I spend 10).
Before you're able to create applications, then you must be very good in programming.
Try not to jump into advance codes. Learn the basics first.
Also tutorials can be helpful at times but practice what you've learnt.
+ 10
I believe that tutorials without practicing what you are learning even very simple codes is nothing in programing
+ 9
You need both. Sololearn can help if you are a beginner.
+ 4
Thanks all for your answer🙏
+ 3
I agree with Sonic. An application becomes the end goal, something you want to build/achieve. You follow tutorials specific to what you need for your application. You then apply what you learn in the tutorials to build the application.
With an end goal, I tend to learn better as you can immediately see the "why am I learning this" and it's much more enjoyable. Too often in education, you just plod along learning things, but are not taught why it's useful or given practical examples. I'm definitely a hands on learner, not a theoretical learner.
+ 2
Practice and progress
+ 1
Sololearn
0
By solving other programmer's problems , you'll learn something new everyday.