Coding isn't like a history exam. You can't just memorize shit and get an A. You're learning a digital craft. The amount of time you have to invest before you see a return is more than most are willing to give. So they quit.
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I've had classmates, old friends, and randoms ask me about learning how to code. Almost all of them quit. #1 reason? They weren't patient enough. They gave up before they saw results. Focus on the process.
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Barrier to entry is low. No degree required. Resources are everywhere and free. Time isn't an excuse. Sacrifice some Netflix or Fortnite.
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I went from ZERO experience in the industry to consistently employed for 5 years by teaching myself how to program. Now I'm self-employed teaching you how I did it. Sign up here:https://atom-morgan.github.io/newsletter/
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Over the years, several people told me the fact programmers have to keep learning and getting up to date, often on their personal time. Yeah it suck a bit but as years goes by, chances are you're getting paid for it most of the time. Or you'll do it for fun anyway.
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Missing: ...is a put off.
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