this post was submitted on 29 Jan 2025
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I would like to code for a living and to contribute to open source projects and things, but my coding skills are absolute shit after taking online courses and watching video tutorials. How can I learn to code for real?

What I would like to learn is algorithms, web development ("full stack"), how layouts work (both in like kotlin compose and HTML) and how to read other peoples code. Maybe thats more than I can chew, but its probably good for me to try out many things before getting settled on one.

Now I have been coding for a while already (~ 4 years), but I kind of feel like I need more guidance to be able to actually create code that works as intended intentionally, and not through trial and error / stack overflow. As for what level i am at, CS50 is probably my only qualification, I have played around with APIs (I.E. making discord bots), and made some html "apps" (horribly made, but things like the "genius" game and a calculator) and "prototype" react websites (as in, really bare bones, barely working).

I do plan on taking CS or something similar, but i'm not yet in college, and I would like to have a good head start before getting there.

Sorry for my bad English, and any help is appreciated.

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[โ€“] deaf_fish@lemm.ee 4 points 2 days ago (1 children)

I mostly agree with your post. I take exception to the barely works part. Either the code works or it doesn't. If it doesn't work, fix it. If it works, don't fix it.

If you "fix" working code, you are spending time adding no value to the project. You could even argue you're adding negative value because the people who are used to the code working the way it was now have a surprise.

[โ€“] nycki@lemmy.world 1 points 2 days ago

Good callout! I agree, don't rewrite just for the sake of rewriting. By "barely works" I am referring to code that functions but where a small change to the requirements would make it incorrect. In that situation you should "break it" in order to add changes, rather than calcifying the legacy code by building around it.