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Aldora
Aldora

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How I became a programmer

I started learning programming on FreeCodeCamp on January 2019, and on July, I became a back-end developer. This maybe seems kind fast, but actually it’s just because I skipped during the course and some luck.
When I was in the middle of Data Visualization Course in FreeCodeCamp, I stopped it, and built my first static website work by mimic for job interview. The website gave me the best opportunity to learn at a very fast speed. Once I finished it, I began to look for a job, within one week, I got the back-end job offer.

So, why back-end, not front-end?
Well, it’s an coincidence. I always hope to have full-stack capability, and this is the answer I gave in every job interview when asked about career plan. And I also told them my shortcoming is that I would lose patience quickly when things get iterated. Luckily, one manager just get interested by my character and learning speed, so he seriously asked me: you don’t need to wait, I can give you the offer as back-end developer now, but you only have three months to prove to us that this is a right choice for both of us, do you want to take this? I took it. Then I’m a back-end developer now.

Don’t let the better be the enemy of good. The thing I learned from this experience is: I shouldn’t wait for the perfect moment to act, I don’t need to start next step only when I get everything prepared. When I learned programming on FCC, I always thought it as a step-by-step path, I can only start next course after I get this certificate, I can only start to build my first website when I finished the whole course, I can only start when I seem perfect. No, don’t let this be a reason to postpone to act, don’t let this learning, preparing process be the reason..

If you feel struggling, it's ok. When learning programming, I found learning isn’t a linear line, it’s a spiral process. First, you got a problem, search it and get a strange word, struggle through complicated articles, you remember its name. Later, you encounter it again, not afraid this time, and read articles patiently, basically know the how. Then, it pops up again, maybe with some delicate make up, show you the point you miss. You study it one more time. Then it’s not a problem anymore but a toy. Seem like walking with same problem, but every time the known cycle get bigger. This is a typical pattern for me to learn programming.

I found building the website really helps me grow, it mixes css, js and so much problem I never expects. If we focus too much on the FCC tasks, and geting higher score, then we kind of learn things by memory, not exposed to the real battleground. Then it's natural to forget what we have memorized.

The thing they really value is your learning speed and your potential, not how good you are now, for them, no matter how much you have learned on FCC, you are just a newbie who never have real experience. Compared with knowing all answers for every question during interview, it's more important to show: 'I don't know the answer, but it doesn't matter, I can learn fast, it's not a problem". Your confidence would add the chance that they bet on you.

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