Friday Night Funkin tests your musical knowledge and sense of rhythm. Girlfriend is the happy girl sitting on top of the boom box. She is a white woman with long hair, wearing a red dress and high heels. Can you conquer her?
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Kind of, i'm doing it already.
Where I come from, the course here is quite obsolete. I'm fairly new into web development, however, not having a CS degree, was never a problem.
(I'm pursuing my degree, but i've already taken longer than usual to graduate.)
bien sûr, I think I've learned more by reading blogs, books, egghead videos, etc than in the University
Yes, you can. Like me. I am a nodeJs engineer in New Delhi (Capital of India). I have done my graduation in 2011. And done a sales assistance job in Bangalore (IT city of India). But after one year I was feeling bored from my Job. At that time I know about computer (Open and closed, MS office) only. But I decided to learn coding and computer basics. Till now I never get above 50 % marks from my schooling. So person like me learn and get a good job. Everybody can do this. This is not a rocket science."Welcome in CS society"
Yes you can! Just do, do, do, learn, learn, learn. Browse the internet. When you find something interesting, open dev tools and find out how it's built. Try to remake it yourself. Read books, Hashnode, Reddit, Hacker News. Follow Dribbble, Designer News, Behance, FWA. Ask from more experienced learners. Use Google.
Always think about how could details be even better. Think about the user, be critical. When you see products out there, think about how they could be better. How would you remake them?
Build node gardens (https://nodegarden.js.org), Deck of Cards (https://deck-of-cards.js.org), minesweeper (https://bombsweeper.js.org), view libraries (https://redom.js.org, https://frzr.js.org), state handling tests (https://pakastin.github.io/redom-state) or whatever pops in to your mind. Even if it's really far away from what you would think about doing as a paid job, you always learn something new or some fresh point of view.
I have never officially studied anything related to my work in my life, except some basics of c++ in university of technology which I dropped out from. I haven't ever needed c++ after that.
I am a fullstack JavaScript developer + designer. I started in 1999 playing with Flash 4, creating animations when I was 14 years old. Gradually I just learned to code without even thinking that much about it.
Designing is something you learn by always thinking about minimalism and harmony, and pushing your work towards those. And copying from others, taking things here and there. Building your scrapbook of the best UI you can find and mixing them until you find something unique and beautiful.
We all start from zero and I tell you, they don't teach you everything at school. Most of the magic you just have to learn step by step. Work by work. Fiddle after fiddle. Sketch by sketch. Design after design. Code of line after another.
Good luck! 😉
Yes. But there's a huge gap in the 'dip your toe in' (codeschool, guided tutorials, etc), and practical application. So it takes a lot of personal interest and drive. As a bootcamp grad, a lot of my weakness is is things like data structures, design patterns, etc. I know that, and so I'm very conscientious about constantly learning and familiarizing with those things. If you're the type of person who can fall down the rabbit (internet) hole and push yourself on it, you definitely can. Also since I brought it up, on a separate note, I did a bootcamp for two main reasons. 1. The structure a curriculum provides 2. Being surrounded by people who are similarly driven 3. Accelerated, dedicated learning (outside of just spare time).
Yes, CS degree for web developer/designer is a waste of time.
Read full answer: As a manager will you hire a programmer without a degree?
Short answer Yes.
Long answer Yessssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssss.
From all the CV's I've seen, of students coming out of uni - not a lot of them can code. That said, they understand some of the fundamentals that someone without a CS degree might not have. So if you do want to learn without a CS degree then go for it, but don't forget best practises and fundamentals. :)
You can do anything without a degree. There's nothing holding you back. Pick up a book or just start coding from tutorials that are free on the interwebs. You'll be surprised by how easy it is!
Daniel Williams
I am IT employee
CS degree is one of the criteria to become a web designer, getting over it but if you have full skills and work experience, it doesn't matter whether or not you have a CS degree. wordle