After 6 months of learning, I’ve started to feel like I’ve plateaued in my learning journey. In the beginning, even though everything seemed compli...
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This is well said, and I think you've got a great attitude about the "wall" we can sometimes run into while learning. Often just taking a step back (sometimes literally, breaks are good for you!) can give you some perspective. One thing I would encourage is to start tackling projects. Once you have the basics down in learning the front-end, you really only gain comprehension by diving in and trying to make something. Google every little thing if you get stuck, and soon enough the pieces will make a whole lot more sense.
For practice, Free Code Camp, Exercism, and Code Wars are all great options, along with Codecademy's mobile app for little quizlets on the go.
Thanks! I’ve been tackling several projects but I’ll try and tackle more difficult stuff to learn. If you’re not comfortable you’re learning - or so I’m told 😅
Haha, absolutely. The easiest way to maintain that "uncomfortable"-but-engaged balance is to try and make something either a) you would personally use to solve a problem, or b) involves some kind of functionality you're super interested in knowing more about. For me, I was fascinated with the way React hooks/state worked, so I just started making stuff to try it out.
Definitely. That’s why I tried to learn more about APIs trying to build something to access NASA’s Picture of the day 😊
I never intended to become a web developer. But I intended to put my ideas into the world. Being a developer was never the end goal, just the path to doing so.
Personally, I would challenging you to stop thinking about what you want to learn, and answer, what do you want to create?
What's a website? A service? An app? Something that you passionately want to see in the world. Whether it a be an actual business model or a hobby, you'll learn a tremendous amount of development skills along the way. Along with other related skills.
Ohh, well put. I haven’t thought about it this way yet. Thank you! 😊🙏
Great advice, thank u
We are on the same boat. Same feelings here, feeling that I need to jump straight to React but I need to stick to the plan because it is more convenient. This is really hard we need to focus on the important vs urgent.
My ideas about it:
-If you don't have the time to learn correctly (which is the worst case and probably the most probable scenario) then do urgent things 80% of your time (learning react) and important things 20% of your time(learning deep JS)
-Paralysis analysis, if you are learning all the time it is better than doing nothing. Sometimes I found myself using a lot of time wondering if I am taking the wrong approach to learning but what is true is that is better to never stop learning. You can't be wrong as long as you keep learning new things.
-I believe what makes us professionals is to know how really things work. Otherwise, I feel like I am cheating. I know some developers who are all the time copying code and reusing templates and they laugh at my approach because they say I could be making a lot of money. But I believe the tradeoff is worth what makes you professional is understanding how things work. Lucky for me I worked in a unicorn startup and I found web developers that were working on silicon valley since 2000 these guys have almost 20 years of professional experience it was insane they created a web app that enabled them later to create a business getting millions on revenue each month and they didn't have competitors because the similar companies didn't understand how they created their product, inside the company I learned a lot and there were a lot of times where I didn't understand why they were doing something in a specific way in their code, most of the time the answer was 'it is because of the specification of this feature', other times it was like 'if you read this book and this other book you will understand that code', things you can mix these technologies in this unexpected way because of their specifications, from that moment I realize that to do something special you need to learn lots of stuff. Then I decided that I wanted to be a creator, not a follower of the flow to be the salmon swimming upstream :P
After 35 years doing this, I can say plateau is never behind me :) You just find new challanges and new plateaus. It's not like it's only one :)
I'm too an impatient one, reading fast, skipping, going back, rushing into things. But that's how my mind works, I accepted it. Im like "results addict", can't wait to get them.
Just a few random experiences/advices that come to my mind...
1) Breaks! Sometimes several day breaks! Many, many times I was stuck, slow, frustrated but was just overworked. Too much new stuff was getting into my head and my brain needed the time to process it. After a break, I was almost always surprised how simple the solution was and things just 'clicked'.
2) if you want speed at start, start with opinionated frameworks/workflows. Freedom to do any single thing in 20 different ways often is overwhelming to a beginner and makes it difficult to learn from other people's code and docs. That said, in the long run, it pays off. So I dont recommend it unless you're a "results addict" like I am.
3) do what you like, not what you think others want. In this life-long learning process, I don't see it is possible to spend so much time and effort without passion for it.
Very true. Thank you for your feedback! :)
These conclusions are super important!
We suggest Exercises for Programmers:
This way - you can actually see what you have 100% officially accomplished. Then you don't have to have anxiety or eventually imposter syndrome. It's just some facts. You'll know how to do a certain amount of things.
Let us know if you pick up the book and try it.
Thanks :)
And if you ever want to share a screen and talk about it! let us know : )
Will do 😊
Hi marcio! Your description about your thoughts and doubts is something every developer has to deal with at the beginning of becoming a real webdeveloper a software engineer or similar careers. For me was following the way to go:
After leaving HTML(5) and CSS quite well I started to learn PHP. It was not difficult to learn it but when I tried to develop something combining these 3 languages together I got stuck Somebody gave me an advice to learn Python; both functional/procedural and object oriented. It would be to long to write the hole story. Learning Python have me the right "feeling" to understand how it works
Im starting to get the feeling everyone deals with something similar, one way or another. Thanks 😊
Thanks a lot 👍! I feel the same way every time I want to learn something. for eg. If I start with React. I'm worried that I don't know anything on the backend part so, I just get struck every time. Now I'll manage to learn one at a time.
Glad I could help. Keep it up :)
@marciof your piece resonates with me. I've been stuck in that plateau for a while myself. I'm a self-taught dev, so I have the constant nagging doubt that I'm doing things like a rookie. I've recently picked up some more advanced books like TypeScript for React or Clean Code. I also took the leap and worked through the Rust book which was forced me to expand my fundamental programming knowledge.
Another thing that has really been helping me make progress again was getting code reviews. I started working on a project with a good friend who has a lot more experience. He gave me lots of really helpful feedback on my code.
I don't want to make a cheap plug here but we both realized that code reviews were really valuable learning tools for us. We're now working on building a community / platform where people can get and give code reviews as well as read reviews on other people's code to learn from them. If you're interested it's called Antcode. We also have a code review Slack group that I think you may find helpful.
Keep on keeping on!
Thank you. That's a great idea. I'll give it a peek :)
Yup I can truly feel you! I have also started to feel that some sort of anxiety and the so called "FOMO". I think if I don't code fast or learn things fast I will miss out on opportunities and my peers and colleagues will get past me in some kind of race. Don't know why I am feeling like this.
I think it boils down to the fear someone else will be better than us. But the only thing we can do is to be better than we were yesterday and continue learning. Good luck! :)
Well spoken. I’ve been through this and I’m still in the iteration but after reading this things have gotten clearer. Most newbies like me need to know this. It’s not possible to just sleep and wake up with knowledge, it takes time.
Yup. And being on twitter or reading about other developers’ achievements we can be led to believe others are more capable just because we didn’t see them struggle or their path 😊
This post may help you too 😁
Thanks! I'll check it out :D
I needed this ,after a fairly easy javascript question flooring me for hours, I seriously felt deflated and questioned myself and whether web development is for me.This has given me a lift thanks.
I’m glad it helped 😊
Yep. The first time I tried a simple JavaScript exercise after finishing my udemy course, I understood what that means as well. Keep it up! :)
Create projects that solve real world problems and find ways to help other people.