I'm a newly graduated boot camper who just landed my first developer job. I'm working on an App in React Native and I'm trying to understand other ...
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As a long time mentor myself, I do not think u are ready for a mentor yet. Ur learning curve is most important right now and u should learn as much as u can by yourself. Almost everything is free out there. Learn to research. My biggest issue is that a mentor may steer u down a bad path or limit ur studies. As a result u can end up wasting a lot of time before realizing that a DIY approach is much better.
I will never mentor a rank beginner because I am specialized like most everyone is. Someone will come to me with a specific issue for mentoring. Mentors who claim to know everything only know a very little bit about each topic.
I agree with Rick. Also you run the risk of only learning what that person knows, and how they think. Which will impede your learning and journey. We are all different and learn at certain rates and understand things at a different pace. You should learn, research and DIY as much as possible and when you think you have exhausted your limits then seek for mentorship. You will be surprised at how much you really know. And perhaps challenge your mentors opinions which would lead to a much better dialog and understanding of terms.
Hello Karoline,
I advise you to take a look at this course on Udemy, it has a deep explanation about redux which helped me understand how it works.
udemy.com/share/101Wby3@NU3gcaHlrg...
I dont advise having a mentor to tell you the best practice of building something right away as there is a great deal from building simething on your own first, you need to understand the things that makes your head spin (like why this component is rendering twice when it should not)
If you need a temporary mentor for your current project to meet your dead lines and impress your bosses thats ok, but as I said you are your own mentor at this stage
Good luck in your career 😀
I thought it was common to have a mentor at your first dev job. A more experienced developer from within your dev team.
It is, it just depends on the company.
You can send me a message (through dev.to or through linkedin which is at my profile) with detailed questions and I can take a look at it as soon as possible :)
Wow thank you! Very grateful for that. Speak soon.
I like to help other people, but would not have time to do that, being a mentor. Do you work in a team on a project? There definitely you should not be the only one working with this, in my opinion. At least they should not leave you alone with this, you are not an "expert" yet. But anyway, is this remote work as a freelancer? Just for my curiousity.
Not a freelancer.
The typical advice is to ask questions on the appropriate discord channel:
In terms of Redux I've found Mark Erikson's Blog to be quite useful. Article's like Why React Context is Not a "State Management" Tool (and Why It Doesn't Replace Redux) are a gold mine.
Thank you for that! 🙏
If I understand correctly it is less about general knowledge, but more about advanced stuff regarding React?
Yes for me it is quite advanced. I have a basic knowledge of React from my education and have built about 25 projects. But they were never this size.
I think a good mentor is supposed to do just that - teaching how to fish instead of feeding a fish for once.
Try to read from official docs or you like watch videos just search into YouTube there are lots of youtubers are great explained on redux.
Try to make some project with your own using redux or context api.
tradeoff?
People are mentoring for different reasons - challenging, paying it forward, social aspect etc. I would love to be a mentor when I'm more experienced.
Hi Karoline, if you will be interested in Angular, Vue or plain JavaScript I'd gladly help. Spend a little while on Redux too.
I want to improve my React /ReactNative skills first but thank you for offering!