Tech Lead/Team Lead. Senior WebDev.
Intermediate Grade on Computer Systems-
High Grade on Web Application Development-
MBA (+Marketing+HHRR).
Studied a bit of law, economics and design
Location
Spain
Education
Higher Level Education Certificate on Web Application Development
You know, instead of procrastinating or jumping to a different thing, start with a blank Java file in your favourite IDE and start typing
publicstaticvoidmain(String[]args)
and begin adding more lines. It can be a calculator that works through the terminal and it will be good. The most important thing for you is to finish something that's little and then checking for bigger (or just different) things.
Also share your learning on Java, I want to read your steps with it! 😁
I am accustomed to getting the fundamental concepts first, like classes, objects, packages, annotations, interfaces, inheritance. I am currently on interface, specifically on default methods. I usually try the code samples given in the official textual tutorial, modify in some parts to try my own idea, using only Javac compiler (although already installed NetBeans and Eclipse).
But I need to be patient this time; so my plan is : after I "finish" with generics, I will visit Spring Boot to resume my learning on it for developing back-end (REST API) for my React app. Actually I want to proceed to J2EE, but it will take longer time. The use of annotations in Spring for declaring a controller class as well as for mapping HTTP verbs to the corresponding class methods look beautiful to me.
I find the use of decorators in Angular framework for similar purpose looks beautiful too; no wonder Nest.js (a Node.js framework) is heavily inspired by Angular on its architecture.
Tech Lead/Team Lead. Senior WebDev.
Intermediate Grade on Computer Systems-
High Grade on Web Application Development-
MBA (+Marketing+HHRR).
Studied a bit of law, economics and design
Location
Spain
Education
Higher Level Education Certificate on Web Application Development
That's nice. I get boring if I only get theory beforehand, I need to put myself hands on and increase my knowledge through this do -> read -> do cycle 😂
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If it's so clear then go directly to Java 😁
You know, instead of procrastinating or jumping to a different thing, start with a blank Java file in your favourite IDE and start typing
and begin adding more lines. It can be a calculator that works through the terminal and it will be good. The most important thing for you is to finish something that's little and then checking for bigger (or just different) things.
Also share your learning on Java, I want to read your steps with it! 😁
I am accustomed to getting the fundamental concepts first, like classes, objects, packages, annotations, interfaces, inheritance. I am currently on interface, specifically on default methods. I usually try the code samples given in the official textual tutorial, modify in some parts to try my own idea, using only Javac compiler (although already installed NetBeans and Eclipse).
But I need to be patient this time; so my plan is : after I "finish" with generics, I will visit Spring Boot to resume my learning on it for developing back-end (REST API) for my React app. Actually I want to proceed to J2EE, but it will take longer time. The use of annotations in Spring for declaring a controller class as well as for mapping HTTP verbs to the corresponding class methods look beautiful to me.
I find the use of decorators in Angular framework for similar purpose looks beautiful too; no wonder Nest.js (a Node.js framework) is heavily inspired by Angular on its architecture.
That's nice. I get boring if I only get theory beforehand, I need to put myself hands on and increase my knowledge through this do -> read -> do cycle 😂