Drop, Ounce and Bucket
It is super-duper that on Habré there are educational articles. So to speak: we study step by step: Ruby drop by drop, Python ounces and something (forgot that) buckets. And ... I almost forgot - Java - in cups.
For the future, you can offer the following units:
You can also switch to the measurement speed: we study javascript with a speed of two functions per hour, or we accelerate PHP to 50 lines per second.
It's great that there are training materials, and it's strange that they come up with names so unoriginally. Apparently, to catch your eye? But it seems to me that if a person is interested in Python, it’s all the same - they squeeze it out with drops, or pour it in buckets :)
It would be very accurate to mark the lessons in%, however, everyone who publishes (I think so) is unlikely to have a clear plan for learning a particular language programming. Therefore, for some it will be 20%, but someone will understand that the language has become clear, and functions - you can always look at the api documentation.
At least at a certain stage in the study of “anything”, I have a moment of “enlightenment”, after which any training course is already redundant, and the questions that arise during programming are on the verge of language capabilities (or, to be precise , my abilities) - and almost with a probability of 99% are not disclosed in any training courses, and what happens is very annoying - they are practically not provided in the frameworks.
Well, what can you do? Typical tasks are solved by basic functions, advanced - you have to write functions yourself. But the most interesting tasks - you have to pick yourself - from beginning to end.
By the way, as with you - I don’t know, I have in the field of web programming, the most interesting part begins when building queries to the database. It is cunning samples with all kinds of accelerations and optimizations - that’s the thin spot. And everything else (I write on CakePHP) is basically so trivial that without much hassle it “spoils” into any other language or framework. It seems to me.
And you?
For the future, you can offer the following units:
- carat
- gram
- milliliter (not a drop!)
- pound (this is for the average level)
- pood (this is already when studying at senior level)
You can also switch to the measurement speed: we study javascript with a speed of two functions per hour, or we accelerate PHP to 50 lines per second.
It's great that there are training materials, and it's strange that they come up with names so unoriginally. Apparently, to catch your eye? But it seems to me that if a person is interested in Python, it’s all the same - they squeeze it out with drops, or pour it in buckets :)
It would be very accurate to mark the lessons in%, however, everyone who publishes (I think so) is unlikely to have a clear plan for learning a particular language programming. Therefore, for some it will be 20%, but someone will understand that the language has become clear, and functions - you can always look at the api documentation.
At least at a certain stage in the study of “anything”, I have a moment of “enlightenment”, after which any training course is already redundant, and the questions that arise during programming are on the verge of language capabilities (or, to be precise , my abilities) - and almost with a probability of 99% are not disclosed in any training courses, and what happens is very annoying - they are practically not provided in the frameworks.
Well, what can you do? Typical tasks are solved by basic functions, advanced - you have to write functions yourself. But the most interesting tasks - you have to pick yourself - from beginning to end.
By the way, as with you - I don’t know, I have in the field of web programming, the most interesting part begins when building queries to the database. It is cunning samples with all kinds of accelerations and optimizations - that’s the thin spot. And everything else (I write on CakePHP) is basically so trivial that without much hassle it “spoils” into any other language or framework. It seems to me.
And you?