I did a bit of formal CS and then was mostly “self-taught”. If you’re already in university either way, I’d say it’s cool to just take a handful of very useful CA or coding classes, and only go deep if you really feel like it’s the right time. You can catch up later (like I did) if you are not yet ready to totally dive in.
Ryan is an engineer in the Sacramento Area with a focus in Python, Ruby, and Rust. Bash/Python Exercism mentor. Coding, physics, calculus, music, woodworking. Looking for work!
I did a bit of formal CS and then was mostly “self-taught”. If you’re already in university either way, I’d say it’s cool to just take a handful of very useful CA or coding classes, and only go deep if you really feel like it’s the right time. You can catch up later (like I did) if you are not yet ready to totally dive in.
Definitely. Good advice for sure.
Yup -- same here. So many good ways to learn how to code, there's no one right solution.